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From
Responsibility to Irresponsibility
One of the major mistakes we’ve made
in American culture over the past century
From a developmental perspective, adolescence is the
shifting from the dependency of childhood to the independence of
adulthood, or from the irresponsibility of child hood to the
responsibility of adulthood. In its deepest sense, adolescence is the
process of going from boyhood or girlhood to manhood and womanhood,
deeper aspects than mere adulthood.
One of the major mistakes we’ve made in American
culture over the past century is letting go of the processes that
created healthy Men and Women by creating an age-arbitrary system where
adult rewards are bestowed on the youth based on age versus worthiness.
This creates legal Adults, but doesn’t guarantee they are Men or Women.
For the vast majority of human history, regardless of whether you’re a
creationist or evolutionist, teens have been in the thick of day-to-day
survival and family or community business.
Allow your mind to wander over all your experiences with not only other
cultures, but even America from the early 1900’s on back. Remember
movies, books, museums and other input you’ve received on how life was
run before what we commonly call modern times. A good example would be
Little House on the Prairie. Can you imagine anywhere 80-100
years ago where all that was expected of a teenager was to sit around
playing Nintendo or hanging out idly at a mall? Probably not, because
until the early 1900’s most teens were deep in the details of everyday
survival with their families. Regarding all those books, movies and
museums, keep in mind that the vast majority of all such input we
Americans have had in our lifetime has been designed, created and
manifested by mostly white males, so many of our stereotypes are skewed
in that direction.
Once adolescents were big enough, they helped with
farm duties, or perhaps the family business if the family had moved into
the city. Or they held many of the menial jobs such as grocery
deliveries or stockroom clerk, giving most if not all of their wages
back to the family. Everyone was busy: even little children to the
extent they could help the family survive. Teens could not have been
allowed to just “kick it.”
This is where some folks will bring up child labor laws, which actually
came about to prevent smaller children from being overworked and
underpaid in sweat shops, if not treated miserably. But teens can often
handle the strain of adult work, particularly the older teens. Where we
went wrong was in taking this responsibility away from them, slowly but
surely, expecting them to mostly attend school. As America came out of
World War II more white-collar than blue-collar in thinking, teens had
even less to do and thus came the after-school, extracurricular
activities. The most criminal thing we have done after taking their
responsibility away is in holding this propensity for irresponsibility
against teenagers in general.
I believe teens should work, if possible, as it helps
build character and yes, responsibility. Many programs geared toward
emancipating teens or giving them independent living skills continue to
be delivered in a classroom format. We no longer have viable vocational
training or apprenticeships. We expect all kids to go to college
although only 20% of us ever graduate. Since most American public
schools grade themselves on how many kids they get into college versus
how many actually graduate, this implies an 80% failure rate. Locally,
I’ve been involved with projects that taught kids woodworking, building
web pages, and teaching them culinary arts.
Other programs have taken gang kids and put them to work in their own
merchandising project (www.homeboy-industries.org), using the fascinating slogan: Nothing
Stops a Bullet Like a Job.
Believe me, teens want to work. It feeds into their goal to become
independent and autonomous, and makes them feel like part of the adult
community.
In Summer 2004, it was estimated that only one third
of all teens could find employment in the US. I’ve been trying to launch
youth employment and entrepreneurial models for a few years now, to
teach them what life in the real world is rather than trying to tell
them in a classroom. I can envision a number of models where not only do
the youth work, but run the web site, manage the inventory, learn
bookkeeping and distribution, and sell the product or service directly.
Each group or clique of kids can contribute. I’ve run into many people
who supported this concept and just as many who believe teens are
inherently broken and will destroy or corrupt anything they touch.
We’re wary when they hang out on street corners, refuse to provide a
teen center for them to visit, complain because they stare at a computer
screen or video game all day, then build malls to attract them into
shallow spending.
In short, I propose we gift our teens with responsibility, and welcome
them back into the club.
Bret Stephenson
6 August 2005
http://www.opednews.com/articles/opedne_bret_ste_050806_from_responsibility_.htm
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