According to Julia Mckinnell in the article “Control, Alt, Erase” she talks about how social networking has become a problem for teenagers, and how parents can serve as “a role model” by helping and making sure that their kids personal information is safe. Mckinnell gives important reasons why parents should be aware of the consequences that social networks can have on their children. Posting a message, a tweet, or a photo online can give away the location and time it was posted. This data can be used to identify, or to gather personal information. For example, Tech companies gather personal data onto teenager's social media accounts for profit (Mckinnell). Also, jobs might look to gather data about certain individuals to know who they hire. Therefore, it's important for parents to teach their children risks involving sharing personal information to the public.…
In this century, you can not go anywhere without there being around social media, with 98% of U.S. adults ages 18-24, (Statisticbrain) social media is pretty hard to avoid. Social media is a website or application that enables users to connect with one another and share ideas. Social media is very innovative, there are plentiful positive impacts of social media, that many people do not even come to realize, because they usually just see the negative impacts. Social media has much more good, than bad in it. According to Sarah Lee Katz from CNN "On the whole, teens said that they feel that social media has a more positive than negative impact on their social and emotional lives." (Katz)…
By June, 1212 about 30,000 kids under the age of twelve had showed up to support and go on the journey to capture back the holy land. (Kreis, Steven) Even wealthy children had snuck outside of their families to join. The children’s crusade seemed like it would be successful and had good intention, but had a huge lack of sense of leadership and planning. He had led him and his army into a dispute against all factors of nature. At him being so young of age, that had also caught up with him. It has been said that the children’s crusade was a set up to try and shame the king and his army to go and fight for the holy land.…
We’re afraid, because our kids know things we don’t.” (Goldwasser, par. 7). Teenagers have the ability to decide what becomes popular through the use of social media and the internet. They are the main reason why Apple products have become so popular and common; they made movies like “High School Musical” popular. Through their use and time on social media they were able to make the movie “Juno” an Oscar winner, made MySpace worth five hundred and eighty million dollars. Goldwasser stated “Besides, we’re tired of having to ask them every time we need to find Season 2 of “Heroes,” calculate a carbon footprint or upload photos to Facebook.” (Goldwasser, par. 8). A major reason parents think that the internet is melting their kid’s brains is because they just don’t seem to know how to do certain things with the internet without having to ask for help from a teenager. Parents also believe that teenagers are consistently blogging about them. As the author said “teenagers today read and write for fun; its part of their social lives. We need to start celebrating this unprecedented surge, incorporating it as an educational tool instead of meeting it with punishing pop quizzes and suspicion.” (Goldwasser, par. 14). Adults need to be able to start trusting their kids that what they do on the internet is not…
When a government has full control of their people, a slew of rules will follow that may inspire political upheaval if those being control are not in favor of the rules. Many things inspire rebellion, though many back down in the face of adversity, do not gain enough of a following, or are not meticulous enough when it comes to planning to rebel. In 1984, a totalitarian government controls everything in a nation named Oceania. With the public constantly being monitored 24/7, they must show full allegiance to this nation and must not even think a bad thought towards it. Physical activity is forced, food is rationed by the government, and all citizens…
“I must make the important distinction between the rebel and the revolutionary,” says Dr. Rollo May, one of the most influential American existential psychologist among society, in an excerpt titled, “The Humanity of the Rebel” from his prominent book, Power and Innocence. Rollo May vividly highlights the enduring opposites of the rebel and the revolutionary amongst a society battling to protect conventional norms and traditions. As reasoning, optimistic human beings, many struggle to take the moral stand necessary against injustice in the world. Humans, however, embody this central constituent to be aware of injustice and take necessary, primary action, in the form of “rudimentary anger.” This action against injustice evolves into two forms – the revolutionary and the rebel. May states that the revolutionary desires “external” change in politics, like overthrowing a government leader and replacing him/her. The rebel, however, has an everlasting persistence to break from the conventional views of society, to “oppose authority,” impacting people internally, whether emotions or mindsets, rather than push for physical, or visible change. Revolutionaries have an underlying lust for power, while rebels share their power to benefit society and protect his/her logical and spiritual integrity; rebels desire to be a respected individual. Civilization, therefore, is defined by the actions and the shared power of the rebel that is sparked by rebellion like Prometheus. May further emphasizes that rebels are the key to the “first flower,” the survival of society for thousands of years because they shake the “rigid order of civilization;” rebels go against the status quo. Rebels must battle consciousness, realizing the responsibility, and struggle to make difficult, worthwhile decisions. A rebel, however, struggles with the idea as God(s) as the one(s) who keep men conventional and in line; Gods are, however, at the same time human’s motivation for…
Movies are a special tool that can keep one company when they are in a moody situation. It is a contrivance that is being used almost all over the world by different types of people for a particular purpose. There are diverse film genres like comedy, action, family, musical, and romance that are being produced each year in the twenty-first century but however, the twentieth century has contributed various types of classic films such as King Kong, Annie Hall, which can never be forgotten. One of most memorable, teenage romantic films of all time would have to go to Rebel without a Cause because it tells how the present day teenage love life is like, “a romance set among teenagers seeking satisfaction outside the traditional systems, misunderstood by their parents, misunderstanding and mistrusting of their parents' values” (Tomlinson par2). A movie that includes a variety of elements deserves being…
All teen activist are fighting for different thing. But look at Malala she is fighting for girls education. And Fay Carry is fighting for people to get lost dogs a home. Plus Alex Lyne is fighting to get electronic waste and have people recycle it and not throw it away. And they all have one thing in common they all stand up for what they believe in.…
Have you ever wanted to change the world? Teen activists do! Teen activists are teens who fight for a cause or for what they believe in. All teen activists make a difference in the world. They have to overcome many obstacles, but in the long run that makes them a better teen activist who has such a strong belief that things should be different in their community. Some examples of teen activists that show this are Malala Yousafzai, Faye Carey, and Craig Kielburger. I believe all of these teen activists fight for what they believe in.…
Did you know that teens can make a huge difference in our world? Teen activists all have a reason why they began what they did and how they began doing it. Possibly it was because they had a rough past, they’re determined to fix something in our world, or want to help others experiencing the same problem. There are many different ways teen activists begin, but these are just a few.…
On Nov 10th we had a game against VMS, which is our rival. I was at practice the day before and I got tired so I stopped running. When I stopped my coach told me to keep going so I rebelled and said…
The way we conceptualize and allude to war is, in this way obsolete with the truth of reasons for regular citizen passings. What's more, as the above illustration demonstrates, this is not simply semantics. Occurrences that are not thought to be demonstrations of war can sidestep parliament, congress and general society and appear to be expanding in number. Artist proceeds with, "We can see this in an assortment of operations at this moment. Case in point, there have been more than 350 air strikes led in Pakistan that were not voted on by Congress...…
It has been a long while since I read an autobiography and this one, contrary to most everything else professors have assigned to read, was pretty decent. Camara Laye’s The Dark Child is at first glance your run of the mill coming of age tale, with a few different odds and ends thrown in. After the first few pages though, you begin to realize that it isn’t quite as normal and bland as some of the other required readings you may have been assigned. Whether you are a fan of autobiographies or not, The Dark Child is without a doubt worth your time.…
The use of child soldiers is an unpardonable crime. Anybody with the authority to make this decision must have the highest integrity and morals, and using child soldiers simply goes against my and any respectable persons conscious. Their morals would simply forbid them from using child soldiers. The definition of child soldier according to https://www.dosomething.org is “a Child soldiers are any children under the age of 18 who are recruited by a state or non-state armed group and used as fighters, cooks, suicide bombers, human shields, messengers, spies, or for sexual purposes”. Under this definition children sent to the battle school would count as soldiers. The battle school could not cater to the needs of the children. Children need to…
When I was in fifth grade my sister just started junior high. She got into MySpace and I tried my hardest to resist getting an account. I always hated following trends when it came to social media things like that. The next year we got cell phones and she was huge on the texting. She had to get unlimited because she was running up the bill. I on the other hand didn’t even have texting enabled on my phone. I thought that texting and MySpace were both just dumb things for teenagers and preteens to share their boring lives that they think that everyone finds interesting or even remotely cares about. people would always talk about some funny post or a fun game on facebook and it would just irritate the hell out of me. texting just seemed stupid because there is a way faster way to communicate with another person when it isn't possible talk to them face to face, if you know what I mean. It just didn't make sense to me for someone to take three minutes on a text when they could take twenty seconds.…