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Great
Transitions: Preparing Adolescents for a New Century
Chapter
Three: Reengaging Families with Their Adolescent Children
Being
the parent of an adolescent, no less than of a child, in today's
America is a formidable responsibility. Yet families with young
adolescents, in contrast to those with young children, have been
neglected in professional services, community programs, and public
policies. Little attention has been given to strengthening supportive
networks for families in either middle-class or low-income communities.
Although an industry of books, audio- and videotapes, and seminars
has burgeoned for parents with young children, much less information
and help is available to those with adolescents.
A
social consensus holds that parental knowledge of infant and child
development is critical to a child's future; no such consensus yet
exists in defining the knowledge that parents should have about
the adolescent years or about their roles during the critical transition.
To the contrary, many parents are led to believe they should get
out of the way when their children reach adolescence! Others feel
perplexed and angry as they see their authority weakened and their
values challenged; yet they search in vain for counsel in how best
to respond.
Despite
the conventional wisdom about adolescent rebelliousness, young adolescents
moving toward independence are still intimately tied to their families;
they still have much to learn and more growing to do. Whatever their
ethnicity and economic circumstances, in survey after survey they
reveal a yearning for parental attention and guidance in making
educational and career decisions, in forming a set of values, and
in assuming adult roles. Not only do they want the supportive guidance
of their parents, they desire it of other adults as well.
The
poignant answer of young people to questions about why they join
gangs is that these groups become the families that they never had.
This is compelling testimony to young adolescents' fundamental need
for close, reliable relationships with a supportive, protective
group that confers respect and identity and recognizes competence.
Many gangs do just that, although at the price of strict conformity
to norms that tend to be antisocial and dangerous.
Parents
who strive to remain closely involved in their growing adolescent's
life, however, are often prevented from doing so by job and career
demands, the rigid boundaries between work and home life, and the
frequent claims on their time and resources from aging parents or
younger children, among other constraints. Existing school policies
and teacher attitudes, in addition, have long discouraged the involvement
or accepted the absence of parents in school activities beyond the
elementary school years. Schools, businesses, government, religious
institutions, and other community organizations must now seek ways
to provide opportunities and support for parents in their desire
to have a closer relationship with their young adolescent.
STRENGTHENING
PARENTS' ROLES DURING THE EARLY ADOLESCENT YEARS
Sustain
Parental Involvement in Middle Grade Schools
Parents who want their children to do well in school must remain
involved in their education through the middle and high school years.
Although more schools are recognizing the importance of such involvement,
their numbers are still small. If further progress is to be made,
there must be more widespread, meaningful change in the attitudes
and practices of teachers and principals. Parents who do participate
in the school feel useful, develop confidence in their relations
with school staff, and are more likely to attend school activities,
which signal to young adolescents the importance of education.
Particularly
in low-income neighborhoods, schools can act as family resource
centers where parents can meet to learn about normal changes during
adolescence and take advantage of educational offerings in computer
literacy, employment counseling, English-as-a-second-language, health
promotion, and citizenship. Schools, moreover, can inform parents
about programs and students' progress on a regular basis; they can
provide specific suggestions for ways that parents can assist with
homework and other learning activities; and they can involve parents
as volunteers in schools and include them in school governance committees.
Create
Parent Peer Support Groups
A previous generation of studies of troubled parent-adolescent relationships
emphasized the alienation of adolescents from families as inevitable
and served to discourage education, health, and youth-development
professionals from seeking ways to strengthen families in their
critical role during a child's second decade of life. This perspective
has begun to change with new findings from studies of adolescent
development in nonclinical settings and of a variety of relationships
between adolescents and their parents.
The
conclusions drawn from research are that young adolescents flourish
when they have a family life characterized by warmth and mutual
respect and when they have parents who show serious and sustained
interest in their lives; who respond to their changing cognitive
and social capacities; who communicate high expections for their
achievement and ethical behavior; who demonstrate democratic, constructive
ways of dealing with conflict; and who provide a consistent basis
of discipline and close supervision. Such a family atmosphere can
provide powerful protection against the risks of a young person's
engaging in unhealthy or antisocial practices or becoming depressed
and alienated.
Of
course, in real life achieving this ideal is not easy. To assist
them in their relationships with their adolescents, parents are
turning increasingly to parent support groups. Mutual-aid groups
of this kind can reach a large number of families in an efficient
way. Participants share information and experience about handling
the transition from childhood to adolescence, aspects of normal
adolescent development, how to improve their communication skills,
ways to renegotiate the parent-adolescent relationship, how to set
and enforce limits, where to find resources in the community, and
how to deal with the needs of both adolescents and younger siblings.
Additionally, they can get help in coping with changes in their
own lives, which can sometimes interfere in their relationship with
their adolescents. In the few low-income communities where they
exist, parent networks can also assist others in gaining access
to health care, adult education, including literacy classes, and
job training and placement.
Provide
Prospective Guidance to Parents on Adolescent Transitions
The Guidelines for Adolescent Preventive Services of the American
Medical Association (AMA) recommend that parents or other caregivers
of adolescents receive prospective information and guidance on early,
middle, and late adolescence as part of adolescents' annual health
examinations. The Carnegie Council seconds this advice. During these
visits, parents can learn about normal adolescent physical, sexual,
and social development; the signs and symptoms of diseases and emotional
distress; ways to promote healthy adolescent adjustment; and how
to prevent potential problems, such as helping adolescents drive
responsibly, monitoring their social and recreational activities,
and restricting sexual behavior and the use of tobacco, alcohol,
and other drugs.
Reassess
Public and Private Policies and Practices
Legislation, public policies, and workplace practices do not yet
recognize the ways that institutions still conduct business largely
based on outdated assumptions about family structure and functioning.
Many parents, as a result, are deeply stressed in their efforts
to fulfill their responsibilities toward their children and adolescents
as they struggle to earn a living. One way or another, families
continue to make the critical difference in the health and educational
outcomes of children. To encourage and support parents and other
adults in their vital role in the lives of adolescents into the
next century, changes in policies, programs, and laws are therefore
needed.
- Professionals,
such as teachers, nurses, social workers, physicians, psychologists,
and youth development specialists who work with adolescents, must
be prepared to work not only with individual adolescents, but
also with their families.
- Employers,
such as corporations and public agencies, should extend to parents
of young adolescents the workplace policies now available for
those with young children, including flextime, job sharing, telecommuting,
and part-time work with benefits. Such family-friendly workplace
policies would allow parents to become more involved in middle
and high schools, serve as volunteers in community organizations,
and spend more time with their teenagers.
- Congress
should extend the child care tax credit from its current ceiling
of age ten to that of age fourteen, thus providing some financial
relief to parents seeking to provide safety and support for their
young adolescents in the risky afternoon and early evening hours
when work schedules usually require parental absence from home.
When
the private world of families and the public spheres of neighborhoods,
communities, and workplaces are mutually supportive, we have our
best hope for preparing all of our adolescents for a new century.
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American
Businesses Invest in Young Adolescents
More parents of young adolescents must find ways to balance their
work and family responsibilities today than ever before. As the
number of dual-earner and single-parent families continues to
rise, parents who work outside the home find few safe, high-quality
programs to provide structure and adult guidance for their young
adolescents after school and during vacations and holidays. Finding
quality care is even more difficult for parents who work nontraditional
hours, in workplaces that operate twenty-four hours a day. In
response to the growing needs of parents, a number of American
corporations have begun to diversify their dependent benefits
programs to support parents of young adolescents.
REACHING
OUT TO FAMILIES
Some major employers have joined forces to provide activities
for their employees' young adolescents during the out-of-school
hours. The American Business Collaboration for Quality Dependent
Care (ABC) is a coalition formed in 1992 by 137 corporations (expanded
to 156 by the end of 1994), to assist employees in finding reliable,
local care for their dependents. To address the lack of programs
for young adolescents when schools are not in session, ABC provided
funding for the creation of adventure camps, ropes and challenge
courses, and science and technology camps.
"WE
HAVE FUN BUILDING THINGS"
To help parents find attractive and educational alternatives for
their young adolescents, members of ABC funded the development
of summer science and technology (Sci/Tech) camps for ten- to
fourteen-year-olds, where campers learn about computer graphics,
solar power, and architecture. Members of ABC see the camps as
an investment in the future and as a child care solution for their
employees with young adolescents.
The camps open early and stay open late to fit parents' work schedules.
Attendance at these camps is not limited to the children of the
sponsoring corporations--the parents of 64 percent of the campers
at STAR (Science and Technology Adventure Researchers) Camp in
South Brunswick, New Jersey, work for other companies. The Sci/Tech
camps reach out to girls and to minorities, who are traditionally
underrepresented in science and math camps. In New Jersey, two
new Sci/Tech camps emphasize hands-on science experience for young
adolescents, who are challenged to ask questions, make scientific
predictions, and plan for their futures.
At the STAR Camp, sponsored by several ABC partners including
AT&T, IBM, and Johnson & Johnson, the sessions held at
the camp's Liberty Science Center are the highlight of each day.
Campers go on field trips to explore the working world of science.
They meet scientists, engineers, and technicians at Mobil Research
and Development's Water Toxicology Lab and other area companies.
There, campers are scientists for a day, wearing lab coats and
goggles and preparing real experiments. Such experiences show
young adolescents that what they learn in the classroom during
the school year and at camp during the summer does apply to the
"real world." According to one camper, "STAR Camp
is much better than other camps because you get to play computers
and go to more field trips than other camps."
BALANCING
WORK AND FAMILY LIFE
Other companies, either in addition to or independent of ABC,
have their own work and family divisions that develop programs
to help employees balance work and family life. IBM, for example,
offers its 150,000 employees (60 percent of whom are part of a
dual-income couple, 30 percent of whom have children who require
supervision, and 5 percent of whom are single parents) several
Work and Personal Life Balance Programs. These programs provide
flexible leave and telecommuting options to parents.
To develop ways to make flexible schedules available to parents
and to reduce absenteeism and tardiness, Marriott International,
AT&T, Stride Rite, and Hewlett-Packard formed Flex Group.
Flex Group members believe that flexible schedules make good business
sense: employees who have schedule flexibility are more productive
and are loyal to their companies.
Marriott International's Work-Life Department has developed alternative
working arrangements for their employees who are parents of young
adolescents. In addition to job sharing, condensed work weeks,
and telecommuting, the department offers informational videos
and materials on parenting, child care, and other concerns to
help parents balance work and family demands. Marriott also established
a bilingual and confidential Associate Resource Line (ARL) pilot
service. Staffed by master's-level social workers, ARL provides
twenty-four-hour counseling and advice to employees about concerns
that arise from balancing work and family. ARL currently serves
about thirteen of Marriott's units; in 1995, the service is expected
to be expanded to include seventy-five more units.
Toyota Motor Manufacturing in Georgetown, Kentucky, operates a
twenty-four-hour child development center on site for children
whose parents work round-the-clock shifts. The center arranges
for school-age children to be picked up at school and dropped
off at the center, where they receive assistance with their homework
from 4:30 to 6:30, eat dinner, and go to bed at 9:00 on school
nights. During the summer, the center runs a full-day summer camp.
About 60 percent of the children enrolled in the camp are between
the ages of ten and thirteen.
THE
FUTURE
The companies of ABC are winning praise for their efforts to respond
to the needs of their employees' families. These innovators also
are inspiring other companies to follow their lead. As more and
more young adolescents are part of families where both parents
or guardians work full time outside the home, the availability
of flexible work options and quality out-of-school programs becomes
increasingly important. These companies demonstrate that the extension
of dependent care benefits to parents of young adolescents is
a viable way to increase parents' productivity.
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