Throughout the video labeled, Cultural Differences, there were many easily identified alterations between the people of Kakuma, Kenya, Sudan, and our American culture. The video begins with the discussions of what people from these African countries don’t have, that most of us take for granted such as, showers, electricity, and housing. The Lost Boys, is a group of men who are originally from a different countries of Africa and travel to America to experience some of our customs and norms. Through the video, they discuss basic differences, like differences in food, and also others such as the purpose of a trash can.…
After reading all 232 pages of Disturbing Behavior: 53 Alarming Trends of Teens and How to Spot Them, its authors, Lee Vukich and Steve Vandegriff, has successfully enlightened me regarding disturbing behaviors teens undergo. This book is an essential to any Christian parent or youth worker since it covers issues that teens struggle with. Through 53 chapters, each one effectively discussed an issue a teen may be dealing with, Vukich and Vandegriff achieve their goal: “to raise awareness so when you [the reader] are faced with these issues, you will have a Reader’s Digest condensed version of what you are dealing with.” By using biblical stances and common sense, these authors cover major issues, alphabetically. Personally, these…
In the journal article “Violence, Older Peers, and the Socialization of Adolescent Boys in Disadvantaged Neighborhoods” by David J. Harding, Harding (2009) suggests that disadvantaged neighborhoods influence how adolescents make romantic and educational decisions. Adolescents are also more likely socialized with the more accessible older people in the neighborhood who don’t have a job, and work on the streets. The young people feel that socializing with older men in their community that work in the “underground” economy helps with navigation through the dangerous streets and the older men influence their decision.…
There is a TV show that airs on A&E that is called Scared Straight. This show highlights teenagers either rebelling against parents, to disobeying the law. These teenagers are sent off to jail in another city in which takes place and prison on changing these kids for the betterment of their life. This show tells of how a teenager lives every day from the time they wake up until its bedtime. One instance a teenage boy likes to skip school, smoke marijuana, and beats up his younger siblings. This deviant behavior is taking place while he is living with both of his parents. Since the parents are scared to punish him because if they punish him the risk of the parents might be sent to jail. Studies has placed reason for children becoming more deviant…
Shock, disbelief and terror were just enough for a country to be flipped upside down. The attacks on the United States of America on September 11, 2001 sent the country into a frenzy about the safety of civilians. Both the elected leaders and average citizens were faced to answer the question of who, in their eyes, could be trusted. After the attack, not only were Muslim- Americans suddenly seen as evil by the American people, but a program was initiated which required immigrants from specific countries to register with the government in order to screen for any risks to the nation.…
She identifies that the society she, and all the other mothers, are raising their children in is a “toxic cultural environment” (126), “where they’re surrounded by unhealthy images about sex and relationships” (126). While she thinks her daughter should stray away from the stereotypes of women, she believes rebellious behavior has been equated to casual and impetuous sex. She goes on to support her claim by giving examples of how schools are targeted and affected negatively by ads. While smoking and drinking were mentioned as typical rebellious behavior as well, it seemed like her biggest concern was objectification, sexualization of teenagers, and body image, because when she compared physically toxic air to unhealthy images of sexuality a sense of motherly concern comes…
“Our teenagers withdrew to their bedrooms on their thirteenth birthday and didn’t show themselves to us again until it was time to get married.” (2)…
Deciding a utopian vision that I would be familiar with in order to change the process had proved to be quite difficult. Feeling defeated on this paper, I sat down and watched my usual television programming and started to watch a favorite show of mine, ‘16 & Pregnant ‘. I watch ‘16 & Pregnant’ and episode after episode and observe a teenagers trying to raise a child and deal with the consequences of having a child at that age. After empathizing with the latest teenager to appear in the show’s fourth season of airing I realized what I am watching weekly in a sixty to ninety minute part of my day doesn’t need to happen. If teenagers were educated thoroughly throughout their lives on human sexuality and behavior, I believe the rate of teen pregnancy would rapidly decline. A decline in teenagers becoming pregnant would be my utopian vision for the future.…
First of all, the primary source uses many words to describe adults’ actions to indicate the oppression teenagers suffered right now. Evidence like “clean up your looks,” “watch all the things you do,” “got methods of keeping you clean” and “rip up your heads” clearly show what kind of oppression teenagers have and what they need to resist. Adults are trying to make teenagers fit the “good standards” created by them. Good teenagers should be innocent, be obedient, study hard and so on. What’s more, adults are ready to find out teenagers’ mistakes at any time so that they could guide teenagers to what they thought is the correct way. They also want to make teenagers believe that the adults’ words are all right. Teenagers who live in such environment…
Family Dinners: The effect is has on our children Midterm Project Kaplan University Research Methods in Criminal Justice CJ490 Abstract _There are countless studies of teens in our society who commit violent crimes. This study will show having family meals opens the lines of communication between teens and their parents. Through this communication parents will increase the chances of their teen doing well in school and preventcrime and teen pregnancies. _ Family Dinners: The effect is has on our children Introduction One of many things that is lacking in today’s society is the quality time we are able to spend with our children. With children left to their own devices and with limited communication between parents and their children, they are more likely to turn to drugs and crime. According to May, Vartanian, and Virgo, “a key predictor of adolescent self concept and quality peer relationships” (Adolescence, 2002) comes from the bond that parents form with their teens. With the bonding that is involved in family dinners, adolescent children are more likely to talk to their parents about their problems and less likely to turn to drugs and alcohol to cope. Literature Review The first point of this study involves the correlation between family dinners and teen crime rates. According to the FBI’s supplementary homicide reports for 2005, “there were 1,067 murders committed by individuals between the ages of 12-17.” (Puzzanchera & Kang, 2008) This is more than a 50% reduction in homicides committed by teens in the past ten years. A survey conducted by the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University found that “the number of children ages 12 to 17 who said they ate dinner with their families at least five times a week, was at 58%.” (Foderaro, 2006) This is an eleven point increase over the past ten years. By having a family dinner, teens have an automatic curfew and they are not on the streets committing crimes. Another major point…
Young people fall into the period of life from the beginning of puberty to the attainment of adulthood. Caton (2001) argues that this period is usually concomitant with problems as they "struggle" to fit themselves into society. Symonds et.al, 2011 concur with this and state that the journey from adolescence to adulthood in this day is far more daunting. It takes much longer, and the roadway is filled with “far more potholes, one-way streets, and dead ends.” For youths to leave home at an early age during the 1950s, for example, was “normal” because opportunities for work were plentiful and social expectations of the time reinforced the need to do so (Settersten and Ray, 2010). The circumstances of this generation are however different.…
Furstenberg, F. (2000, November). The sociology of adolescence and youth in the 1990s: A critical commentary. Journal of Marriage and the Family, 62(1), 896-910.…
Furstenberg, F., Cook, T., Eccles, J., Elder, G. H. & Sameroff, A. (1999). Managing to make it: Urban families and adolescent success. Chicago: University of Chicago Press…
As violence by juveniles has increased in recent years, the debate about parents’ legal responsibility for children’s behavior has escalated. Shootings, gang violence, drugs, alcohol these are very few things that children this lifetime are getting into. These are the things that parents are teaching their kids to stay away from but children, teens are doing them anyway. Why would kids do any of these things when they were raised not to? It’s because of peer pressure,…
One of the big contributors to youth’s rebelliousness starts with individualism. Young people feel as if they do not need to be controlled by anyone. As George Lipsitz states in his essay, We Know What Time It Is, “People resisting domination can only fight in the arenas open to them; they often find themselves forced to create images of themselves that interrupt, invert or at least answer the ways in which they are defined by those in power” (p.179). Lipsitz tells the reader in this statement that young defiant people often rebel from domination in order to become free of any laws or rules that govern them. Lipsitz states, “Despite endless rhetoric about “family values,” the wealthiest and most powerful forces in our society have demonstrated by their actions that they feel that young people do not matter, that they can be our nation’s lowest priority” (p.177). This quote declares that young people are regarded to as the lowest priority in our nation. Lipsitz continues, “From tax cuts that ignore pressing needs and impose huge debts on the adults of tomorrow in order to subsidize the greed of today’s adult property owners, to systematic disinvestment in the schools, the environment and industrial infrastructure, the resources of the young are being cannibalized to pay for the irresponsible whims and reprehensible avarice of a small group of wealthy adults” (p.177). This quote further supports his statement how young people are referred to in the U.S. as the lowest priority in our nation. By young people becoming aware…