Super Teen Girls

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Super Teen Girls
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Empowering Tween Girls: The 5 Super Powers Every Girl Needs
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No one likes to feel confused, but that’s exactly what pre-adolescence aka tweendom is all about. Remember that awkward state in your own life when your body, your friendships, and even your environment changed?
One day, everything makes sense; the next you’re not sure who you are or how to act. No wonder girls between the ages of nine and thirteen have mood swings. They want to assert their independence, but at the same time, they’re not quite ready.
Ramita Anand, founder of Elevate , an educational mentoring service for pre-adolescent girls, knows all too well about this stage. This former teacher and mother has seen firsthand how girls lose their confidence and sense of security during these years. She reflects, “If they’re not guided and mentored and lifted in a way, it doesn’t matter how bright they are. Self-doubt creeps in and they lose their way.” She’s made it her mission to empower tween girls .
Anand is dedicated to championing and encouraging these girls so they develop the super powers that will lift them up and empower them live their best lives.
Having confidence requires that girls embrace a growth mindset. To cultivate this belief, Anand spends a lot of time talking about the brain with the girls she works with. She explains how this organ can grow and expand, and that you can actually teach yourself. That’s why the language we use is so important. For example, girls may need help to make the pivot from “I’m not good at math” to “I’m not good at math yet .” Anand works to explain that “anything we do – anything we want to change, requires a bit of practice and commitment, and as long as you’re willing to make the effort and put in the practice, then everything will come.”
Parents can empower their tween girls by modeling their own growth. Maybe you’re a good runner now, but you weren’t when you were younger. Be sure to share your failures and the hard work you put in to get to the point where you became successful.
It’s also helpful to break down growth into small, realistic steps. As an example, if you want to take up a new sport, first you practice, then you try out for the team, then you play on the B team where you work hard and improve.
According to Anand, “Most girls are not actively taught the social-emotional language to be self-aware or the ability to express their emotions.” She works to help girls understand their emotions so they can both communicate and regulate their emotions.
It is a fact of life that you’re going to have challenges. That’s why Anand wants girls to learn that falling is okay, but you want to have a plan for how you’re going to get up. For example, let’s say the weather ruins your plan for an outdoor picnic. This setback presents a great opportunity to come up with a Plan B. Your plans may have to change, but you’ll still get something out of it. As Anand says, if tween girls know that “disappointment won’t break us,” they will be empowered to be persistent and to see obstacles as opportunities.
So many leaders and top level managers are looking for someone with empathy , the ability to put yourself in other people’s shoes. Parents can teach this to their children by giving people an opportunity to speak and share what they’re thinking so they can learn from others. When you travel or have a relationship with someone who is different from you, this exchange happens. But it can also happen in the day to day when you are watching the news or when reading books. In these situations , parents can ask questions like How do you think that person felt when they were going through that experience?
There is a real difference between being nice and being kind. Manners and being polite are important, of course. Kindness stems from not looking for some external validation . You do it inherently. Anand wants girls to understand that it’s not good enough that you want your teachers to see you being good. The goal is to be kind when no one is looking and it doesn’t matter who can see your acts of kindness. These are the things that make the world a better place.
Susan Borison, mother of five, is the founder and editor of Your Teen Media. Because parenting teenagers is humbling and shouldn’t be tackled alone.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Fictional superheroines in DC Comics
This article is about the superheroine. For other characters given this name, as well as other uses, see Supergirl (disambiguation) .
Iterations of Supergirl: the Silver Age original (top left), the Matrix version from the 1990s (top right), Linda Danvers (bottom left), and Cir-El (bottom right)
^ Jump up to: a b Estrella, Ernie (May 28, 2018). "Inside Supergirl: Being Super with writer Mariko Tamaki" . SYFY WIRE .
^ "Supergirl – #94 Top Comic Book Heroes – IGN" . Uk.ign.com . Retrieved July 14, 2011 .
^ The 25 Best Heroes of DC Comics - IGN , retrieved June 22, 2021
^ Fleisher, Michael (2007). The original encyclopedia of comic book heroes. Volume Three, Superman . Jerry Siegel, Joe Shuster, Janet E. Lincoln. New York: DC Comics. pp. 307–312. ISBN 978-1-4012-1389-3 . OCLC 173641581 .
^ Action Comics #309–310 (Feb–March 1964), confirmed in Action Comics #370
^ Sanderson, Peter . Amazing Heroes #96 (June 1986). "Superman will be the only Kryptonian who survived the destruction of Krypton." – John Byrne on The Man of Steel . Excerpted at "The End of History" . supermanthrutheages.com . Archived from the original on September 30, 2007 . Retrieved September 7, 2007 .
^ 52 : "Week Four and Week Five," 2006.
^ "Killing Supergirl was my idea, approved by DC in order to make Superman the sole survivor of Krypton for his new relaunch. Everyone was in agreement but I was the first to suggest it." Archived January 28, 2006, at the Wayback Machine – Marv Wolfman, MarvWolfman.com: Q&A. Retrieved on September 14, 2008.
^ Superman (vol. 2) #16
^ Superman (vol. 2) #21-22
^ David, Peter (w), Frank, Gary (p). Supergirl (vol. 4) #50. DC Comics
^ David, Peter (w), Benes, Ed (p). Hail and Farewell v4, #80 (May 2003), DC Comics
^ David, Peter (w), Woodward, J.K. (p). Fallen Angel #14 (March 2007), IDW Publishing
^ David, Peter (December 13, 2006). "Fallen Angel #14 and #15: Supergirl Fans, please note" . PeterDavid.net . Retrieved June 24, 2007 .
^ Taylor, Robert (January 21, 2007). "Reflections: Talking With Peter David, Part 2" . Comic Book Resources . Retrieved June 24, 2007 .
^ "Newsarama | GamesRadar+" . Newsarama . Archived from the original on October 11, 2007.
^ "The Comic Bloc Forums – Geoff, We need to talk – Page 2" . Comicbloc.com . May 3, 2006. Archived from the original on January 6, 2010 . Retrieved June 17, 2010 .
^ "You Will Believe: The Cinematic Saga of Superman" . DVD Talk . 2006.
^ "Story Outline of Superman III" (PDF) . Supermancinema.co.uk . Archived from the original (PDF) on February 25, 2009 . Retrieved December 15, 2008 .
^ Pantozzi, Jill (December 7, 2009). "Helen Slater is Still "Super" " . Comic Book Resources . Retrieved October 12, 2010 .
^ Fleming, Mike Jr. (August 6, 2018). " Supergirl Movie On Drawing Board For Warner Bros/DC; Oren Uziel Scripting" . Deadline . Retrieved August 6, 2018 .
^ Galuppo, Mia; McMillan, Graeme (August 6, 2018). " Supergirl Movie in the Works with 22 Jump Street Writer" . The Hollywood Reporter . Retrieved August 6, 2018 .
^ Busch, Anita (August 13, 2018). "Female Director Scorecard: Warner Bros Lining Up Its Superheroes" . Deadline.com . Retrieved November 24, 2018 .
^ "Peter Dinklage, Elle Fanning Think Reed Morano Should Direct WB's 'Supergirl' " . The Hollywood Reporter . Archived from the original on September 25, 2018 . Retrieved October 4, 2018 .
^ Hughes, Mark (May 31, 2019). "Robert Pattinson To Star In Matt Reeves' 'The Batman' " . Forbes . Retrieved May 31, 2019 .
^ Rubin, Rebeca (February 19, 2021). "Sasha Calle to Debut as Supergirl in 'The Flash' for Warner Bros. and DC" . {{ cite web }} : CS1 maint: url-status ( link )
^ "Supergirl: How Superman's Lost Daughter Predicted the Flash's DCEU Hero" . June 21, 2021.
^ "New 'Supergirl' Sasha Calle Teases Cir-El's Debut in 'The Flash' Movie?" . May 24, 2021.
^ Mendelson, Scott. "Girls To Get 'Separate But Equal' DC Super Hero Girls Product Line" . Forbes.com . Retrieved April 23, 2015 .
^ Reich, J.E. (July 8, 2015). "Hotly Anticipated DC 'Super Hero Girls' Website Is Now Live" . TechTimes.com . Retrieved August 25, 2015 .
^ "Meet the Heroes – Others" . DC Super Hero Girls . October 1, 2015 . Retrieved October 1, 2015 .
^ "Welcome to Super Hero High School" . dccomics.com/ . October 1, 2015 . Retrieved October 1, 2015 .
^ Pantozzi, Jill (June 9, 2016). "DC Super Hero Girls Are Getting Their Own Movie" . HitFix . Archived from the original on June 20, 2016 . Retrieved July 13, 2016 .
^ "Freedom Fighters: The Ray Enlists Supergirl's Benoist to Voice Overgirl" . Comic Book Resources . August 30, 2017 . Retrieved June 19, 2018 .
Supergirl is the name of several fictional superheroines appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics . The original, current, and most well known Supergirl is Kara Zor-El , the cousin of superhero Superman . The character made her first appearance in Action Comics #252 (May 1959) and was created by Otto Binder and Al Plastino .
Created as a female counterpart to Superman, Kara Zor-El shares his super powers and vulnerability to Kryptonite . Supergirl plays a supporting role in various DC Comics publications, including Action Comics , Superman , and several comic book series unrelated to Superman. In 1969, Supergirl's adventures became the lead feature in Adventure Comics , and she later starred in an eponymous comic book series which debuted in 1972 and ran until 1974, followed by a second monthly comic book series, The Daring New Adventures of Supergirl , which ran from 1982 to 1984. Supergirl was originally introduced in Action Comics #252 as the cousin of the publisher's flagship superhero , Superman in the story The Supergirl from Krypton . In most depictions, she is an alien from the planet Krypton , possessing a multitude of superhuman abilities derived from the rays of a yellow sun. Other mainstream characters have taken the name Supergirl over the years, with decidedly non-extraterrestrial origins, such as that of a superhuman artificial life-form . The 2016 miniseries Supergirl: Being Super written by Mariko Tamaki and pencilled by Joelle Jones is a coming-of-age take on Supergirl's origins. [1] It depicts Kara as a seemingly ordinary teenager living in the rural Midvale with the Danvers, since the couple found her inside a pod in the middle of a field. Kara grows up aware of the pod and her unknown origins (which are glimpsed in dreams) and struggles to live a normal life as she discovers her astonishing super-human abiltites, which she keeps a secret even from her closest friends. [1]
Because of changing editorial policy at DC, Supergirl was initially killed off in the year 1985 limited series Crisis on Infinite Earths . DC Comics subsequently rebooted the continuity of the DC Comics Universe , re-establishing Superman's character as the sole survivor of Krypton 's destruction. Following the conclusion of Crisis on Infinite Earths , several different characters written as having no familial relationship to Superman have assumed the role of Supergirl, including Matrix, Linda Danvers , and Cir-El . Following the cancellation of the third Supergirl comic book series (1996–2003), which starred the Matrix/Linda Danvers version of the character, a modern version of Kara Zor-El was reintroduced into the DC Comics continuity in "The Supergirl from Krypton" story within Superman/Batman #8 (February 2004). This modern Kara Zor-El stars as Supergirl in an eponymous comic book series and additionally in a supporting role in various other DC Comics publications.
Since her initial comic book appearances, the character later branched out into animation, film, television, and merchandising . In May 2011, Supergirl placed 94th on IGN 's list of the Top 100 Comic Book Heroes of All Time. [2] In November 2013, the character placed 17th on IGN's list of the Top 25 Heroes of DC Comics. [3]
After positive fan reaction to Super-Girl, the first recurring and most familiar version of Supergirl debuted in the year 1959. Kara Zor-El first appeared in Action Comics #252 (May 1959). The story that introduced the character was drawn by Al Plastino and written by Otto Binder, who had also created Mary Marvel , Captain Marvel 's sister and female spinoff. Like Supergirl, Mary Marvel was a teen-age female version of an adult male superhero, wearing a costume that was identical to the older character's other than substituting a short skirt for tight trousers. (Binder also created Marvel Comics ' Miss America , a superhero who shared little other than the name with her sometime co-star Captain America .)
Reaction to Supergirl's first appearance was tremendous, with thousands of positive letters pouring into the DC Comics offices.
Issue #8 of the Superman/Batman series originally published in 2004 re-introduced Kara Zor-El into the DC continuity. Like the pre- Crisis version, this Kara claims to be the daughter of Superman's uncle Zor-El and aunt Alura In-Ze. Unlike the traditional Supergirl, Kara is born before Superman; she is a teenager when he is a baby. She is sent in a rocket in suspended animation to look after the infant Kal-El; however, her rocket is caught in the explosion of Krypton and becomes encased in a Kryptonite asteroid . She arrives on Earth years after Kal-El, who has grown and become known as Superman. Owing to this extended period of suspended animation, she is "younger" than her cousin. At the end of "The Supergirl from Krypton" arc, Superman officially introduces her to all the heroes of the DC Comics Universe . She adopts the Supergirl costume and accepts the name.
A new Supergirl series, written by Jeph Loeb , began publication in August 2005. The storyline in the first arc of Supergirl depicts a darker, evil version of Kara emerging when Lex Luthor exposes her to Black Kryptonite . The evil Supergirl implies that Kara's family sent her to Earth to kill Kal-El as revenge for a family grudge. At the time, Kara herself refuses to believe this, but later flashbacks indicate that not only is this partly true, but Kara had been physically altered by her father as a child before being involved in several murders on Krypton. However, these matters were later revealed to be delusions as a result of Kryptonite poisoning. [ citation needed ] Upon being cured, she presents a personality more like that of her Silver Age persona.
Kara Zor-El (originally just Kara ; Kryptonians during the Golden Era used a single name for most women, and a two-syllable name for men; thus the addition of the patronymic to the female name is a contemporary convention) [ citation needed ] is the last survivor of Argo City , which had survived the explosion of the planet Krypton and drifted through space. [4] The city had been covered by a plastic dome for weather moderation, devised by Zor-El , the younger brother of Jor-El , a climatologist and engineer, the father of Superman ( Kal-El ). The dome held together a large chunk of land mass under the city as it drifted through space in the general direction of our Solar System. However, the bottom-most layers of bedrock were affected by the explosion of the great planet's fissionable core and underwent a slow but steady chain reaction , turning into green kryptonite. Using raw deposits and refined materials at hand, the residents of Argo City laid down a ground shield of lead foil to protect them from the developing kryptonite. Zor-El was also able to fashion a makeshift propulsion system to try to accelerate the city's approach to the Solar System. During the roughly 30 years Argo City traveled through space, Zor-El met and married Alura, daughter of In-Ze, who in turn bore their daughter, Kara—blond like her parents. But before the propulsion system was able to steer the city toward Earth, a deranged citizen named Jer-Em, who was suffering from survival guilt, damaged the exhaust, veering Argo toward a swarm of meteors that crashed into the underside of the land mass on which it rested. As the inhabitants of the colony were being slain by the green kryptonite radiation released by meteorites shredding the lead barrier, the adolescent Kara was sent to Earth by Zor-El in a rocket, to be raised by her cousin Kal-El (a.k.a. Clark Kent). To ensure she would be recognized by Superman, Kara's parents provided her with a uniform which was closely based on the one Superman wears.
It later develops Zor-El and Alura survived the radiation poisoning that killed everyone else in Argo City by entering the Survival Zone, a parallel continuum akin to the Phantom Zone . They were eventually rescued by Supergirl and the couple decide to live in the bottle city of Kandor . [5] Later, Kara is reunited with her parents, but that reunion becomes bittersweet, as Reactron kills her father and her mother dies when New Krypton is destroyed by a trap in Reactron left by Lex Luthor, her own cousin Superman's greatest enemy on Earth and now her greatest enemy on Earth as well.
On Earth, Kara acquires powers identical to Superman's and adopts the secret identity of Linda Lee, a resident of Midvale Orphanage. She conceals her blonde hair beneath a brunette wig and functions as Supergirl only in secret, at Superman's request, until she can gain, in his opinion, sufficient control of her powers — and the wisdom to properly use them. Her debut was delayed by her powers being stolen by a Kandorian villainess; during this per
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