Entries in Teen Pregnancy (9)
Combating the "Juno effect"
July 16, 2008
In recent weeks the media has been buzzing about teen pregnancy. Much of this coverage began with a June 18 feature in TIME magazine that reported of a “pregnancy pact” among a group of high school girls in Massachusetts. The report stated that these girls, aged 16 and younger, conspired to get pregnant and even high-fived each other when the pregnancy tests turned out to be positive. While it was later discovered that there was no pregnancy pact and many of the details reported in the story were untrue, a furor still erupted over the issue of teen pregnancy.
Adding to this was the revelation that for the first time in 15 years the teen pregnancy rate in the United States is rising. Hollywood, a frequent lightning rod for any controversy regarding youth, has been blamed for much of this. Last year’s award winning film Juno, the pregnancy of teen star Jamie Lynn Spears and TV shows, like ABC Family’s ‘The Secret Life of the American Teenager’, that involve pregnancy plots have been blamed for glamorizing the idea of teen’s having babies.
Nokia Lolitas, Bully-Suicide Connection, High Tech Bullying, Disney bucking trends, U.S. lagging in teen pregnancy, Using cell phones to avoid moms.
July 15, 2008 The Nokia Lolitas: A combustible mix of minors, sex and technology
It’s a sultry early Friday night in downtown Fairfield and a pod of teenagers has converged at the local 7-11 for the free Slurpees being given away in celebration of July 11, aka 7/11. The teens are armed with all the tech you’d expect from suburban kids of some means, raised in the age of cell phones and the Internet. Instead of riding Razor Scooters, they’re talking on Razr V3 fully-loaded phones and listening to tunes on their iPods. As the new tech has taken hold, it’s been accompanied by a spike in amateur, do-it-yourself exhibitionism. It’s a sexual revolution that’s trickling down to teens, who are experimenting with sexuality in a way that’s more public than ever before. Read the full story…
Studies Suggest, But Don’t Confirm, Bullying-Suicide Connection
Researchers have repeatedly found signs of an apparent connection between bullying and suicide in children, according to a new review of studies from 13 countries. Nevertheless, there is no definitive evidence that bullying makes kids more likely to kill themselves. Still, “once we see that there’s an association, we can act on it and try to prevent it,” said review lead author Dr. Young-Shin Kim, an assistant professor at Yale University School of Medicine’s Child Study Center. According to international studies, bullying is common and affects anywhere from 9 percent to 54 percent of children. In the United States, many have blamed bullying for spurring acts of violence, including the Columbine High School massacre. Read the full story…
Cyberbullying grows bigger and meaner with photos, video
Ricky Alatorre doesn’t know which classmate surreptitiously hoisted a cellphone camera and snapped his picture or exactly when it happened. All Ricky, 16, knows is the fuzzy yet distinguishable portrait of him in English class showed up on MySpace, on a page that claimed to be his. And the fake profile, titled “The Rictionary,” not only identified his school but also said Ricky loved dictionaries — a swipe at his school smarts — and was gay (he’s not), one of the most common schoolyard taunts. Read the full story…
Disney bucks music industry downturn
While many music industry executives are crying in their soup, Walt Disney Music Group’s Damon Whiteside is singing “Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah.” Whiteside, senior vice president of marketing of Walt Disney Records, saw a whopping 60 percent rise in music sales from 2006 to 2007 because of the tween and young-teen music craze led by Disney star Miley Cyrus. Meanwhile, overall music industry sales were down 17 percent in the same period because of digital downloads and pirated music online. “It’s thanks to the tween and younger teens that the music business is staying alive,” Whiteside said here at the YPulse 2008 National Mashup, a two-day conference about teens and technology. Read the full story…
Teen Pregnancy: Why the U.S. Lags Behind Europe
Of all the industrialized countries in the world, the U.S. has, by far, the highest instance of teenage pregnancies with a rate that more than doubles the nearest competitors. After posting on the topic earlier this week, I did some further research and came up with some common sense answers as to why this is. One of the best sources I found was Advocates for Youth. Each summer since in 1998, Advocates for Youth and the University of North Carolina at Charlotte sponsor annual study tours to France, Germany, and the Netherlands to explore why adolescent sexual health outcomes are so much more positive in the three European countries than in the U.S. The following italicized bulleted points are from their most recent findings. Here I will go point and counter point with what the Europeans do successfully and our U.S. reality—buckle up! Read the full story…
Cell phone is mom-avoidance device for teens
Tweens and teens are pushing parents to adopt text messaging so they don’t have to talk “live” over the cell phone, according to mobile phone executives. A typical teenager carrying a cell phone might let mom’s call roll over to voicemail and then immediately text her back, “What going on?,” according to Stephen Saiz, manager of consumer insight and strategy of the Walt Disney Internet Group’s North American mobile division. “Teens are pushing their parents to go on mobile because they don’t really want to communicate with them directly,” Saiz said here on a panel of mobile executives at the YPulse 2008 National Mashup, a two-day conference on teens and technology. He said later in an interview that his Disney division researches teens’ and parents’ behavior on the cell phone and with its mobile applications. The majority of older audiences using Disney mobile applications skew to mothers who are goaded there by their kids, he said. And most tweens and teens prefer to text message and instant chat with parents and friends rather than talk directly so that they can continue doing other things like play video games with friends, he said. Read the full story…
Hollywood, Sex Ed & Teen Pregnancy
July 10, 2008
The U.S. has the highest rate of teen pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases of all industrialized nations. What is the cause of this? Well right now I’m seeing two trends appearing in the news: lack of education and celebrity influence.
Many people think a solution can be found through better sex ed for teens by parents and educators. The idea is that teens become sexually curious but aren’t being properly educated by parents or schools about the facts regarding sex. It’s argued that because of this young people are becoming pregnant and infected with STD’s. Many go even further to say that abstinence only education is hindering teens and that greater access to contraceptives and teaching about “safe sex” would make a huge dent in these troubling stats.
Another argument relies on example and influence. It argues that celebrity culture is glamorizing not only sex but also teen pregnancy. Jamie Lynn Spears (Britney’s 17 year-old sister) recently gave birth to her child and referenced her delivery as being “perfect”.
Headlines for 7/8/08: Dating Violence, Everyone's Online, Intentional Pregnancies, Sex Ed Debates, Beer Pong, True Life Returns.
July 8, 2008 CBS News: “Horrors” Found In Tween, Teen Dating.
Tweens and teens in dating relationships are experiencing significant levels of various forms of abuse, many don’t know the warning signs of an abusive relationship, and many parents don’t know what’s going on in those relationships, a new survey says. Among the findings:
-69 percent of all teens who had sex by age 14 said they have gone through one or more types of abuse in a relationship.
-40 percent of the youngest tweens, those between the ages of 11 and 12, report that their friends are victims of verbal abuse in relationships, and nearly one-in-ten (9 percent) say their friends have had sex. Read the full story…
Older Americans’ Online Behavior Mirrors Younger Users’, Even Teens’
76 percent of Americans over 50 say the internet is an important source of information for them. That figure is up from just 51 percent five years earlier, according to findings from AARP and the Center for the Digital Future at the USC Annenberg School for Communication, MarketingCharts reports. The research, part of the Digital Future Project, also found Older Americans embraced Web 2.0 and often use the web — and several forms of social media — as much as, or more than, younger and more tech-savvy counterparts. Instant messaging and video downloading still remain more popular with a younger crowd, but Older Americans check the ‘net for news more frequently than younger users and are logging onto online communities, researching purchases, becoming socially active and playing games in increasing numbers. Read the full story…
Washington Times: Many teens opt to get pregnant.
Pregnancy pacts among teenage girls are really nothing new. The 1986 movie “Peggy Sue Got Married” featured one.
When high school senior Peggy Sue said she no longer cared who her boyfriend Charlie dated, best friend Maddy snapped to attention. “But I always thought you were going to marry Charlie, and Carol would marry Walter, and I’d marry Arthur,” Maddy protested to Peggy Sue. “We’d all live on the same street and take our kids to the park together and have barbecues every Sunday. It’s going to spoil everything if you and Charlie break up.” Read the full story…
US Sex Education Debate: The Students
In a forum to discuss sex education in US schools, some young people commented: Vanessa Geffrard, University Of Maryland: “Sex is something private, something great between people.” Benjamin Barrows, Bowie High School: “Sexuality is a part of our being.” Nikki Babayeva, University Of Maryland: “A comprehensive sex education program will include both parts: abstinence and contraception.” Gyawu Mahama, George Washington University: “Adults in general just ignore the issue.” Read the full story…
‘Beer Pong’ Video Game Has Controversy Brewing
Richard Blumenthal said Monday that the Entertainment Software Rating Board made a mistake by clearing the game for young teens and he worries other games in the yet-to-be-released Frat Party Games line will also be approved for those same gamers. “Beer Pong” was designed by Las Vegas-based JV Games Inc. as a downloadable game for Nintendo Co.’s popular Wii game system. Read the full story…
MTV’s ‘True Life’ captures fickle young audience
WHEN WE first meet 16-year-old Chris in an episode of the MTV documentary series “True Life,” he’s practicing skateboard stunts with his buddies and ignoring the floppy brown hair that hangs like a curtain across his eyes. Typical teenage stuff, right? Not exactly. Chris is deaf. And as the show proceeds, he undergoes surgery to have a cochlear implant inserted into his head, allowing him to hear for the first time in his life. Moments after the implant is turned on, he walks through a parking lot and revels in the symphony of unfamiliar sounds. “I can hear the wind,” he signs. “And I can hear cars going by … and people walking… . And talking everywhere. I can hear it. It’s cool.” It’s a quiet triumph, an extraordinary moment in the life of an ordinary (read: unfamous) person. Read the full story…
Teen Headlines: June 25, 2008
June 25, 2008 TheStar.com: Can subcultures still thrive in the glare of the digital age?
The underground, and especially the subcultures that inhabit it, have been much debated and examined since British academic Dick Hebdige published Subculture: The Meaning of Style (1979), a groundbreaking examination of the symbols and rituals of the punk subculture in London. Almost a decade after Subculture, in an essay reflecting on youth culture, Hebdige wrote: “Subculture forms up in the space between surveillance and the evasion of surveillance, it translates the fact of being under scrutiny into the pleasure of being watched. It is a hiding in the light.” Read the full story…
Family meals turn teenaged girls away from drugs, alcohol
Adolescent girls who sit down for frequent meals with their families are half as likely to smoke, drink and use marijuana as those who share family meals less often, according to a new study. “Part of it is just parents being more in touch with their kids, being able to see earlier on if their kids are veering down a path that might not be filled with healthy choices,” says Marla Eisenberg, lead author of the paper and a professor of pediatrics in the University of Minnesota’s medical school. Read the full story…
MediaPost: Overexposed: Kids See Too Many Alcohol Ads On Cable
Alcohol TV commercials are on the rise—and more young people are being exposed to them, especially on cable programs. Georgetown University’s Center on Alcohol Marketing and Youth (CAMY) says 12- to-20-year-olds witnessed nearly a 40% rise in alcohol messaging from 2001 to 2007. The group says exposure levels to these ads by young people are the highest since the group begin monitoring ads in 2001. But there is some progress—especially from one self-regulating approach from alcohol trade associations. Where 30% or more of a TV show’s audience is made up of underage drinkers—under age 21—the group notes that the percentage of alcohol product ads on these programs has been trimmed to 6.3% in 2007 from 11% in 2003. The main problem is cable TV. Read the full story…
New York Post: RETAILER SEES RED OVER RISQUE AD ‘SPEED DRESSING’
New York ad agency Saatchi & Saatchi is trying to contain the damage after a major client, JC Penney, took the firm to task over a fake viral ad that makes light of teen sex. The ad, called “Speed Dressing,” shows two teens practicing taking their clothes off - and then putting them back on quickly - in anticipation of eventually hooking up in the basement while mom is upstairs. The spot displays Penney’s logo and campaign slogan, “Every Day Matters.” Penney officials claim they became aware of the ad, which never aired on television, only after it popped up on YouTube and a slew of other Web sites over the weekend. Read the full story…
Red Herring: Report: Apple Killed Music Industry
Apple’s iPod is partly to blame for the collapse of the music industry, according to a report Friday from researcher eMarketer. The Mac maker helped set the tone for a “rat’s nest of restrictions and incompatibilities” that have stalled the growth of digital music, according to Paul Verna, the author of the report. Revenue in the music industry continues to decline in part because of consumer confusion, the report said. A big part of the reason is music fans are asked to sort out the explosion of incompatible formats, players, restrictions, and retailers. That lack of simplicity has slowed sales. Apple has been a “double-edged sword” for the industry, the report said. Its closed system works well for iPod users, “but leaves many frustrated consumers outside of that system.” Read the full story…
CNET: Kid Rock’s surprising take on illegal downloading
Kid Rock’s sarcastic “just do it” YouTube rant on illegal downloading is funny and makes the point—illegal downloading is stealing. With a smile on his face Rock says, “I’m rich,” so sure it’s OK to steal my music. Oh, and while you’re at it, “Steal everything.” Steal an iPod, Steve Jobs is a billionaire, he’ll never miss it. Get yourself a Toyota, “They’re foreign” and the gas too, “You know how much money the oil companies make?” Rock shrugs it all off, “They’re not going to miss $30 or $40 worth of gas.” Read the full story and watch the video…
MSNBC: Religious Americans: My faith isn’t the only way
America remains a nation of believers, but a new survey finds most Americans don’t feel their religion is the only way to eternal life — even if their faith tradition teaches otherwise. The findings, released Monday in a survey of 35,000 adults, can either be taken as a positive sign of growing religious tolerance, or disturbing evidence that Americans dismiss or don’t know fundamental teachings of their own faiths. Among the more startling numbers in the survey, conducted last year by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life: 57 percent of evangelical church attendees said they believe many religions can lead to eternal life, in conflict with traditional evangelical teaching. Read the full story…
AP: Little `Barbie Brat’ bullies become concern
Recess was Allie Long’s favorite part of the day until the second grade, when some of her friends on the playground pressured her to join their whisper campaign against a classmate. Allie shrugged. She didn’t want to hear their rumor or help spread it around. In an instant, her best friends since kindergarten became her tormenters. “They started taunting and teasing her,” said Allie’s mom, Trudy Ludwig. “She was on this play structure and they blocked all of the exits and wouldn’t let her off. They started moving closer to her. Allie just freaked out. One of the girls realized it was getting out of hand and got a teacher to help.” Bullying among adolescents has captured the attention of researchers, educators and parents alarmed by a parade of mean girls and cyber-bullies caught in mid-punch on viral video. But such aggression may not just happen in a whirl of adolescent hormones, some in the growing anti-bully movement argue. Read the full story…
Advertising Age: Hey, Buddy, Can I Bum a Snus Off You?
Faced with rising taxes for cigarettes — in New York the price of a pack hit $9 — and ever-tightening smoking bans in places such as Los Angeles, where a bill threatens to force smokers out of all outdoor eating areas, Big Tobacco is trying a new approach to keep America’s dwindling 45 million smokers in the fold. The solution: snus (they are always curiously plural), a pinch of steam-cured tobacco nestled in a tiny tea-bag-like pouch. Snus don’t need to be spit out like traditional fermented dipping tobacco; they simply remain under your upper lip until you’ve gotten your nicotine fix. Read the full story…
Advertising Age: In Google We Trust
The most reputable company in America: Google, which toppled Microsoft from the top perch in the 2007 Harris Interactive Reputation Quotient study released today — and sent it tumbling all the way down to No. 10. But what should be even more eye-opening to the companies rounding out the top 10 — which include Johnson & Johnson and General Mills — and the rest of the list is that Google’s victory shows that a company that spends nothing on advertising can still be the most positively perceived by consumers. Read the full story…
Texting ‘addiction’ costing teens, parents
When the cell bill arrived, complete with a $300 payment notice, Travis Ramsay was in a state of disbelief. Travis Ramsay ran up a $300 mobile phone bill, mainly because of texting charges. “I was pretty mad,” the 13-year-old said. “I walked outside and punched the wall as hard as I could.” He was mad because even though the bill was his father’s name, Travis Ramsay had to pay it. After all, it was his text messaging that padded the amount due. Ramsay said when he started texting his friends, some who at times were standing right by him, and he didn’t realize the cost. Plus, he said, it was fun. Read the full story…
Emaxhealth: Strong Student Connection To School Community Key To Preventing Violence
In a report issued by McLean Hospital, the United States Secret Service and the United States Department of Education, researchers note that creating a positive school climate in which students believe the school staff genuinely wants to hear from them about threats or possible attacks is critical to preventing future Columbine-like school violence. The 15-page report “Prior Knowledge of Potential School-Based Violence: Information Students Learn May Prevent a Targeted Attack,” available at www.secretservice.gov , outlines the results of multiple interviews of bystanders to violent school attacks to determine how students with prior knowledge of school violence made decisions regarding what steps, if any, to take after learning the information. Read the full story…
New York Times: Starving Themselves, Cocktail in Hand
Manorexia. Orthorexia. Diabulimia. Binge Eating Disorder. All are dangerous variations on the eating disorders anorexia and bulimia, and have become buzzwords that are popping up on Web sites and blogs, on television and in newspaper articles. As celebrity magazines chronicle the glamorous and the suffering, therapists and a growing number of researchers are trying to treat and understand the conditions. The latest entry in the lexicon of food-related ills is drunkorexia, shorthand for a disturbing blend of behaviors: self-imposed starvation or bingeing and purging, combined with alcohol abuse. Read the full story…
The National Post: Exposed G-string tied to today’s social values.
For hippies, it was the androgynous tunic; for modern teens, it is the exposed G-string. “There’s always a link between style and social values,” said Mariette Julien, a professor at L’Universite du Quebec a Montreal who presented a paper on the topic of teen dress at the country’s largest annual gathering of academics last week. “People aren’t conscious of the symbolism in their style of dress, but it remains very present.” Read the full story…
Other Headlines:
- Possible Gossip GIrl Spinoff
- Gen Y Fears Wrinkles: Cosmeceutical Sales To Hit $21 Billion
- Beloved Characters as Reimagined for the 21st Century
- Disney Revs Up Tween Star Machine
- Thai School gets bathrooms for transvestite students
- Why GTA IV Was the Beginning of the End
- Teen Choice Awards 2008 Nominations
- Sears teams with MTV to lure teens
- Facebook overtakes MySpace worldwide
- Disney’s “Camp Rock” racks up ratings
Teen Headlines: June 24, 2008
June 24, 2008 Health Alert: Teen teeth whitening
The desire for whiter, brighter teeth is trickling down to teens and even younger. Kids across the country are bleaching their pearly whites, often without their parents knowledge. But there are some things you can do to help them avoid tooth trouble. Girls and boys alike, from elementary to high school, are white hot about bleaching their teeth.
Dr. David Carroll, a dentist, said, “Kids are under a lot of pressure, as adults are, to look and to feel to look good, to have white teeth.” Read the full story…
NBC10.com: Experts Say Teen Drivers Want Parents’ Help
New research was made public on Tuesday about teenage drivers and what parents could do to keep their kids safe.
The information comes just a day after a 16-year-old driver, who had his junior license for just six days, lost control of his SUV, killing himself and a 16-year-old passenger. Dr. Dennis Durbin from Children’s Hospital, has analyzed how and why new drivers wind up injured or in fatal accidents. “Literally overnight, teens go from their lowest to their highest lifetime risk of getting in a fatal crash the day they get their license,” he said. “They get that license and I think a lot of people think that’s a license that shows that they can drive. But it’s really not — it just showed that they passed a test that allows them to get on the road.” Read the full story…
Metroactive: Generation Debt.
He was your typical college kid who was persuaded to sign up for his first credit card, right there on the San Jose State campus. It didn’t take long for Rance Bobo to max out that card when he bought a bike. After that, he signed up for a few more cards, using them to buy clothes and stuff for school. The debt started catching up to him, so he decided to take out student loans to pay it off and help make ends meet. By the time Bobo left college, he was $20,000 in the hole. That didn’t stop him from taking out another 20 grand for a car loan. More than a decade later, Bobo, now 30, is still chipping away at his $30,000 tab. Even if he is saddled with debt, with no end in sight, Bobo’s not losing any sleep over it. He finds it hard to save money, often tempted to spend it on nice clothes and the latest technology. He describes his penchant for living beyond his means as a mark of his generation, one made up of folks who will drop $4 on a coffee drink without a second thought, and pride themselves on having the latest gadget in hand. Read the full story…
Through a Teacher’s Eyes: Schools, culture sending the wrong message on teen pregnancy.
“Carol get hooked up” was the subject of an email I received this morning from “urbangiftcardonus@….” Associating it with Urban Outfitters in Cambridge, I opened it. I should have known better. It was a “gift” card offer from FabFlyGear.com, selling clothing by Sean “Diddy” Combs, 50 Cent, Jay-Z, and Eminem. Frankly, if my mind were not on writing this column in response to the Gloucester High School pregnancy debacle, I would have simply put it in the trash. However, since I have visited Urban Outfitters from time to time, mostly out of curiosity, I decided there might be something on sale there that could help me shape an argument to explain what needs to be done if we are to save nearly an entire generation of youngsters from dissolution. Read the full column…
Business Week: What Do Teens Want?
Nearly 59,000 captive teens might seem like every parent’s worst nightmare. But for Helsinki (Finland)-based Sulake, such a group provided a pain-free way to gain valuable insight into what “kids these days” really care about. Pain-free because Sulake runs Habbo, the nine-year-old virtual world that as of early June had some 100 million avatars, 9.5 million of them active on the site each month. And because Sulake could use the world as a platform to question the teens—virtually. Habbo’s second Global Youth Survey features the results of a two-month-long poll conducted at the end of last year, which surveyed 58,486 teens in 31 countries. The findings were recently published in a 255-page report targeted at companies looking to market to the lucrative demographic. Read the full story…
Teens and cell cams: Striking a pose?
Many families preserve history through photos. Often, a trip to grandma’s would seem incomplete without a trip down memory lane via the big book of pictures. These days, electronic media dominates everything from the way we listen to music, communicate and save images. Almost every cell phone has a built-in camera, which has some parents concerned – for good reason. According to a recent report by the Associated Press, more and more teens are taking inappropriate photos of themselves, often wearing little or no clothing, and sending them to prospective boyfriends or girlfriends. More worrisome, these photos, once on the Internet, are accessible to practically anyone. Read the full story…
Hollywood Urged To To Rid Child Movies Of Smoking
It’s been one year since the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) pledged to make the movies that children see smokefree. But nothing has been done to put that pledge into practice. “One year later, we are still waiting for Hollywood to do the right thing,” state Health Commissioner Richard F. Daines, M.D., said today. “The MPAA must act now to protect children from the harmful influence of movie stars smoking gratuitously on film. We cannot sacrifice the health of another generation through indifference and inaction.” Read the full story…
Study: Teens dropping rags, radio for web, games, and TV
A new study reminds us of a trend we’d rather not think too much about: teens and “tweens” are reading less, instead spending more time surfing the web, playing games, and watching TV. More teens than ever sharing—and restricting—content online. The Tween & Teen Lifestyle Report is conducted twice a year (spring and fall), with the most recent study carried out in March 2008 (the results were just published). This time around, 1,182 teens (ages 13 to 17) and tweens (ages 8 to 12) were interviewed in-person, and the results confirm a continuing three-year trend of kids putting down the magazines and books, and picking up the mouse, controller, and remote. Read the full story…
Reuters UK: Cellfire aiming coupons at teens
Mobile coupon provider Cellfire is looking to expand its advertising customer base to include teen retailers and consumer product makers, its chief executive said on Wednesday. Cellfire users receive coupons and discounts on their cell phones from such companies as Hardee’s, Domino’s Pizza Inc, McDonald’s Corp, 1-800-Flowers.com Inc and Peet’s Coffee & Tea Inc. Speaking at the Reuters Consumer and Retail Summit, CEO Brent Dusing said retailers and others who market to teenagers are looking for new ways to reach customers. “If you want to reach them (teenagers) with a promotion, it’s very difficult to reach them in the paper world, of course, because your customer demographics are not reading the newspaper. They’re not checking the mail at home, and they’re probably not going to online coupon sites,” he said. “But they are on the phone, all the time.” Read the full story…
USA Today: Lack of vitamin D rampant in infants, teens
Giving your children all they need to grow big and strong may not be as simple as a gummy vitamin and three square meals. They still may be susceptible to an epidemic that’s starting to gain the notice of pediatricians and bone doctors across the country: vitamin D deficiency. Mike Stone joined a growing legion of children diagnosed with the condition when an X-ray of his 14-year-old bones revealed a skeleton so thin it appeared clear on film. Read the full story…
Information Week: Today’s Teens: Breakin’ The Law, Breakin’ The Law
Kids these days, I tell ya. Turns out most teenagers could care less about the law when it comes to driving and cell phone use. In fact, a recent study shows that in North Carolina, teen use of cell phones while driving has increased since laws preventing it were enacted. How is it they are failing to get the message? Read the full story…
CBS News: Self-Cutting Linked To Risky Teen Sex
Teens who are frequent self-cutters are also more likely to engage in risky sexual behaviors and have a greater HIV risk than teens receiving psychiatric treatment who have cut just a few times, new research suggests. The findings identify habitual cutting behavior as an important risk factor for sexual risk, even in already high-risk teens, researcher Larry K. Brown, M.D., tells WebMD. In 2005, Brown and colleagues from the Bradley Hasbro Children’s Research Center in Providence, R.I., first reported the link between self-cutting and sexual risk taking in a study involving close to 300 teens undergoing intensive psychiatric treatment. Read the full story…
Minneapolis Star Tribune: Dads create clean Christian version of MySpace
About a year ago, Randall Brown started looking for a safe place for kids to hang out. Online, that is. He found out the hard way that MySpace isn’t just for finding friends, networking or listening to cool bands. Companies have hacked into MySpace and spam-slammed it with porn ads and other advertisements. He also looked at Facebook. Although that site has had better luck filtering out porn and ads, there are still teens being teens, posting comments, graphics and applications that might be offensive. Read the full story…
Teen Headlines: June 23, 2008
June 23, 2008 Wall Street Journal: What the Dating Rules You Set For Your Kids Say About You.
Researchers have known for a while that closeness to parents is linked to less risky sexual behavior by teenagers. Now, they’re turning their microscopes on the dating rules parents set, with some surprising results: The limits you place on your teenager’s dating may say more about your own love life than your teen’s needs. Also, parents’ satisfaction with their own life roles shapes the kind of rules they set.
Read the full story…
PC Magazine: Keep Your Kids Safe on MySpace.
As the parent of a teen, I’m coming to the slow and somewhat unpleasant realization that I may have misjudged MySpace. I’m not saying that I have any higher opinion of the social-networking environment than before, but I’m not so sure it’s going anywhere anytime soon. How could something that’s so perfect a reflection of the teenage psyche ever disappear? The teen mind, as best as I can discern from the teens I know (and vague recollections of my own teenage years), is an ever-shifting miasma of emotion, pain, euphoria, sexual interest, and a measurement of one’s social status. That’s also a pitch-perfect description of most MySpace pages. They’re confused, muddled, and urgent. If you could shake the contents of a teenage mind out onto a page, I imagine that these pages are exactly what you’d find.
Science Daily: Warning For Teens: Teeth And Jewelry Don’t Mix
Skin piercings might be the rage among teens, but researchers from Tel Aviv University have found good reasons to think twice about piercing one’s tongue or lip. Dr. Liran Levin, a dentist from the Department of Oral Rehabilitation, School of Dental Medicine at Tel Aviv University has found that about 15 to 20 percent of teens with oral piercings are at high risk for both tooth fractures and gum disease. Resulting tooth fractures as well as periodontal problems, he says, can lead to anterior (front) tooth loss later in life.
L.A. Times: ‘The Baby Borrowers’
From “Kids Say the Darndest Things” to “Supernanny” and “Living Lohan,” the antics of other people’s children, and by extension, the flaws of other people’s parenting, offer seemingly limitless entertainment value. So “The Baby Borrowers,” which premieres tonight on NBC, seems somewhat inevitable. Based on a British show of similar construct, it installs five teenage couples who think they’re ready for marriage and children in a suburban cul-de-sac and hands them a succession of people to care for — infants, toddlers, tweens, teens and finally, aged parental types, with their pillboxes and physical limitations. (Not to worry, the real parents are just a few houses away, monitoring via video and able to intervene if they feel things get out of hand.)
Read the full review…
Newsday.com: Summer season can be dangerous, deadly for teenagers
With school ending, students ease into the lazy-hazy rhythms of summer. But it’s also a time of heightened danger that can end in the glaring lights of hospital emergency rooms - or worse. Over the weekend, a Port Jefferson teen was shot to death. In Oyster Bay Cove, an 18-year-old girl was struck and killed by a car. And in Seaford, a mother and father found their teenage daughter dead at a friend’s home after she failed to come home from a party. Teenagers face increased perils this time of year, many experts say.
Read the full story…
Teen Headlines: June 20, 2008
June 20, 2008 Mass. Teens make pregnancy pact.
A pact made by a group of teens to get pregnant and raise their babies together is at least partly behind a sudden spike in pregnancies at Gloucester High School, school officials said.
Principal Joseph Sullivan told Time magazine in a story published Wednesday that the girls confessed to making the pact after the school began investigating a rise in pregnancies that has left 17 girls at the school carrying a child. Normally, there are about four pregnancies a year at the school. Sullivan told Time that nearly half of the expecting students, none over 16, were involved. Sullivan said students were coming to the school clinic multiple times to get pregnancy tests, and “seemed more upset when they weren’t pregnant than when they were.” Read the full story…
Va. charity probed for helping teen get abortion.
Authorities are investigating whether a Catholic charity violated state and federal law by helping a 16-year-old illegal immigrant who was in the organization’s care get an abortion. Workers with Commonwealth Catholic Charities helped the girl travel to and from the procedure in January and signed a consent form for the abortion, Joanne Nattrass, the charity’s executive director, said in a statement Thursday. She declined further comment. Four of the Richmond-based charity’s workers were fired, according to a letter by David Siegel, head of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ refugee resettlement program. Read the full story…
WIRED.com: Brit Teens ‘Pool Crash’ Using Google Earth
Tech savvy British teens have found an innovative — and illegal — way to beat summer heat using Google Earth. Teens scour through the aerial photographs available in the satellite imaging program to locate houses with pools. Once a target has been identified, the revelers use social networking sites like Bebo and Facebook to coordinate illicit pool parties when homeowners are away, according to U.K tech publication The Register. Read the full story on Wired.com…
Ohio Mom Convicted Of Letting Teens Drink Gets Out Of Jail.
A Warren County woman sent to jail for allowing teens to drink in her home is now out on appeal. Mary Ellen Hause, of Clearcreek Township, was a substitute teacher’s aid in Springboro, Ohio. A school resource officer reviewing students’ Facebook Internet accounts came across a photo of three students holding open containers of alcohol, NewsChannel5’s sister station WCPO reported.Hause was also in the picture.A judge sentenced her to 30 days in jail, but she is out after serving two weeks while her attorney appeals the sentence.Sgt. Don Wilson said he was shocked when he noticed the adult in the picture was Hause, because of her role as a substitute in the district.”You’ve got an adult posing with the kids and all of them had open containers,” said Wilson. “And the second thing that bothered me, was she did work for a school and had exposure around kids a lot.” Read the full story…
Study finds that social networking sites are educational.
Researchers at the University of Minnesota have released a study that says social networks like MySpace and Facebook offer educational benefits. The study found that low-income students are just as technologically savvy as their peers, going against what previous research has indicated. The majority (94%) of students use the Internet, 82 percent go online at home and 77 percent have a profile on a social networking site. As for the educational benefits, the students listed technology skills first, followed by creativity and being open to new views and communication skills. Read the full story…
Teen Headlines: June 11, 2008
June 11, 2008 Teen survey shows virginity pledges can work.
Virginity pledges do deter some teens from having sex, according to a study by the RAND Corp. that surveyed teen virgins over three years to see whether they stayed that way.Of 1,517 adolescents ages 12 to 17 in 2001 when the research began, teenagers who vowed to remain virgins until they were married were less likely to be sexually active than others who didn’t make a pledge.
About one-quarter of the adolescents surveyed (23.8%) made a promise to wait until marriage to have sex; 34% had broken it by 2004, compared with 42% of those who didn’t make the pledge and had sex during that time.
Study: Teens Heed Parental Warnings against Drugs and Alcohol But Indulge When Left Unguided.
A new survey released by the Partnership for a Drug-Free America and the MetLife Foundation has found that parental guidance and example has a profound affect on their children’s use of alcohol and drugs, especially at such “coming-of-age” events as prom and graduation parties.
The survey indicates that when parents engage their children in discussions about alcohol and drug abuse the teens take their parents’ message to heart.
“Only 16 percent of teens whose parents set a zero tolerance policy reported their individual likelihood of using drugs or alcohol, whereas 45 percent of teens whose parents didn’t set such boundaries reported they were likely to drink or use drugs at prom or graduation parties this year,” the report states.
Teen girls fight body image battle.
For teens, especially girls, it may be very difficult to accept themselves as normal in appearance.
Health care authorities say the “body image” that teens have of themselves is often distorted by visual media that relies heavily on images of thin women and muscular men.
Recent high school grad Madison Hayes, 18, said it is very common for girls to be critical of their appearance.
“On a daily basis I hear girls complain about things like their jeans giving them a muffin top; the little love handles above their hips,” she said. “Girls are so picky about how they look.”
Hayes said she believes media influences are probably 90 percent of the reason that young women think there is something wrong with their body shape.
Teens listen to less radio, more Ipods.
Teenagers are beginning to desert radio in favor of music from personal devices and computers, according to Coleman Insights, which studied teens’ listening behavior in a major market.
Long observed by media pundits, the trend is finally having a measurable impact on audience size in the teenage demo. Specifically, Coleman found that 84% of the 14-17 cohort listen to music daily on an MP3 player, iPod, or computer, versus 78% for radio. Coleman described these results as evidence of a “tipping point” in audio consumption: “Coleman Insights has for the first time detected greater use of them than of FM radio in a few specific instances.”
Another Coleman study found the 15-17 cohort favors iPods and MP3 players as primary destinations for listening to music, with 41% choosing the personal devices, compared to just 22% for FM radio.
Living together: No big deal?
An analysis of cohabitation, marriage and divorce data from 13 countries, including the USA, shows that living together has become so mainstream that growing numbers of Americans view it as an alternative to marriage.
The National Marriage Project study of a sampling of Western European and Scandinavian nations, Australia, Canada and New Zealand found that cohabitation elsewhere is far more common and indeed viewed as an option to matrimony. The study found that anywhere from 15% to 30% of all couples identified themselves as living together, compared with about 10% right now in the USA.
“We’re still the most marrying of all these countries, but the data are clearly headed in the one common direction. It’s headed in the direction of cohabitation as an alternative,” says David Popenoe, the report’s author and co-director of the National Marriage Project at Rutgers University, which studies marriage and child well-being.
