Sports keep teens out of trouble Nate Rowe Avid 1B High school sports require around 14 hours per week‚ of a students’ time. This time is only the time spent with the team at school mandated activities. It does not include events like team dinners‚ fundraisers‚ time practicing by yourself. After an athlete spends all this time at practice‚ why would they want to go cause trouble? Most athletes would be too exhausted to even do anything after the time they spend at practice. I believe sports
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Sharon Alexander Dr. McLellan English 102 Does Participating in Sports Keep Teens out of Trouble? Being a teen sports participant myself‚ and rearing six children who participated in sports my views on this subject are based on my own experiences and may be a bit biased. I believe that sports definitely keep teens out of trouble. By playing sports teens‚ sometimes may feel a sense of accomplishment. It may also build self esteem. Sports may challenge their abilities and may contribute to them
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Does participation in sports keep teens out of trouble? Teens should participate in sports because it will keep them healthy and out of trouble. Not only does it keep them healthy and out of trouble but it shows them many aspects in life. Sports can also lead athletes to the use of drugs‚ alcohol and having a high stress level. Some of the benefits to participating in sports can have are‚ staying healthy and fit‚ academic success‚ and lifelong everyday skills. They will be at practice more than
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Word: Ebullient 1) Part Of Speech: Adjective 2) Origin Of Word: 1590–1600; < Latin ēbullient- (stem of ēbulliēns ’boiling up‚’ present participle of ēbullīre )‚ equivalent to ē- e-1 + bulli- (derivative of bulla ’a bubble’) + -ent- -ent )Definition: overflowing with fervor‚ enthusiasm‚ or excitement; high-spirited: The award winner was in an ebullient mood at the dinner in her honor. bubbling up like a boiling liquid. My Sentence: Janice’s ebullient personality won her many friends
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for all teens. A curfew law shouldn’t be necessary to keep teens out of trouble. Teenagers are just kids and are going to make mistakes. You can’t punish all of the teenagers in the town‚ because a few are getting in trouble. It’s unfair to kids and unfair to the parents that have trust in their kids. You don’t want to punish all of the teenagers with a curfew law‚ because it limits the teens lives. A curfew law gets teenagers home before a certain time and makes it almost impossible for teens to hold
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comes to teens having curfews‚ it does help keep them out of trouble. Parents don’t like setting a curfew for their teens‚ but it is sometimes enforced. Curfews where set in the 19th century when America’s cities swelled with millions of unsupervised teens. Like laws mandating school attendance and banning child labor‚ the argument went‚ curfews would improve individual lives even as they protected the social order (Zimmerman). Curfews are to help protect the teens from getting in trouble with the
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Youth curfews are popular. In poll after poll‚ Americans support laws that restrict teenagers’ activities during certain hours of the day and night. Youth curfews are also logical. If youngsters are getting into trouble‚ it makes sense to get them off the streets. There’s only one problem with youth curfews: They don’t work. And we shouldn’t kid ourselves that they do. Yet that’s what we’re doing in Philadelphia‚ where Mayor Nutter recently extended a 9 p.m. curfew on Friday and Saturday nights
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curfews keep teens out of trouble? I personally believe that curfews will not prevent teenagers from getting into trouble. Even with a curfew teens will eventually find a way to do whatever they want. If that means skiving school‚ sneaking out or lying. Sneaking out would give teenagers that adrenaline rush which would make them feel powerful and unstoppable‚ so why wouldn’t they want to do it? Also‚ having a curfew just adds stress on a teen‚ because we will freak out about running late. Does curfew
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In the U.S.‚ cities are debating if teens should have a curfew in order to keep them out of trouble and safe. During a person’s teenage years‚ teens often feel like no one understands them; they are trying to seek their own independence and most of the time it ends them getting into trouble. Having a curfew in place also means that kids under the age of 18 have to be under some sort of adult supervision and keeps teens of the roads at later hours. Parents tend to feel more relieved when they know
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you have a nation? You need a community to even form in to a nation. Like what if no one took responsibility in the communities and went straight to the nation? Like that wouldn’t be good. I mean it’s not bad but it’s leaving the little communities out. Like who would be there if someone’s house gets robbed? Who will put a stop to it? Who will take charge and find the criminal? The nation has more problems than worrying about a little community break in. that’s how I see it. Like who would be there
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