Teen Teenage School

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The teenage years are difficult. Growing up, as Peter Pan will testify, is not for the faint of heart. Problems in school, such as stress, self-image, and emotional control, are often exacerbated by the mass hormonal maelstrom that is more commonly known as high school, making it seem like a physical and psychological obstacle course rather than a place of learning.
School is a stressful time. The American Psychological Association states school is the biggest source of stress for teenagers. The pressure on young adults to perform well in a variety of academic, sporting, and extracurricular activities is grueling. On top of this, teens at high school are expected to make wise, life-changing decisions. The modern world is wonderful in that there are so many choices available for students, but these same options can make their high school years seem overwhelming.
You can't alleviate the stress and pressure of making life decisions for an 18-year-old. However, as a parent, there are some behaviors you can encourage to help your teen through this stressful time.
According to the American School Counselor Association, it is unusual to find a single student who does not suffer from some degree of test anxiety. After all, students spend a lot of time taking tests. There are end-of-semester tests, end-of-year tests, subject matter tests, aptitude tests, state tests, national tests, and college aptitude tests. The list is endless to a stressed-out teenager. Sometimes those tests carry with them some real consequences for not doing well. It's no wonder teens can feel some serious anxiety over testing.
While you can't take away your kids' tests, you can help them navigate the murky waters of their test taking anxiety.
Tiredness is a common problem for many teenagers. In some school districts, the bus comes at 6:30 AM, forcing students to get up far earlier than their natural sleep cycles would wish. In fact, so prevalent is the problem the American Academy of Pediatrics issued a statement in 2014 recommending that middle and high school classes start no earlier than 8:30 in the morning. However, their research found that 40 percent of high schools start before eight in the morning.
There is not much parents can do about the time school starts or when the school bus arrives or all the extracurricular activities their student chooses. However, parents can help make sure their kids get enough sleep.
Compounding this early start time is the average high school student's homework schedule. According to a survey conducted by the University of Phoenix in 2014, this is 17.5 hours a week. If you do the math, you figure that's approximately three to four hours per night. Which might sound fine until you figure in that many teens have jobs, activities or other responsibilities to attend to, leaving little time for homework to get done at a decent hour.
Parents can help their students organize and prioritize.
The American Society for the Positive Care of Children reports that approximately 28 percent of children aged 12 to 18 have been bullied at school. Bullying at school turns what should be a place of learning into a place of misery and even danger, and it takes many forms. Bullying can be physical, psychological, or it can even happen in cyberspace. Every day, thousands of teens are nervous about going to school because they know they will face a bully who will pick on them. This bullying can take the form of physical bullying - where a student feels their physical safety is immediately in danger.
However, cyberbullying is a fast growing reality of the teenage world. The Center for Disease Control estimates that 15.5 percent of students are affected by cyberbullying in some way shape or form. Cyberbullying is very attractive to bullies who can remain anonymous and physically removed from their targets.
Sometimes it is hard to know when teenagers are being bullied. Often, they experience shame or fear and do not want to involve a parent or teacher. So start by knowing what to look for. Warning signs suggested by Stopbullying.gov include unexplained injuries, lost items, declining grades and personality or behavioral changes. In addition:
Your teen comes home every day with stories of an awful teacher. According to your teen, she looses his homework, picks on him for no reason, gives him bad grades 'just because' and goes out of her way to make his life miserable. One survey suggests that 65.5 percent of teens feel they've had a teacher negatively impact them. That's a lot of not getting along.
While it's tempting to pull out your best mama bear impression, and go to school and sort out that nasty teacher, this is in fact, a great opportunity for you to model for your teen how to handle conflict - something they will deal with in their adult lives as well.
Your teen's peers are all preparing for college or a career, with seemingly clear direction of where they want to go and what they want to do. Yet for your student, the thought of having to decide what she wants to be for the rest of her life right now is absolutely overwhelming. So rather than grab the bull by the horns and do something, she falls into a pit of apathy and angst, worried about choosing a career and whether or not she'll choose the wrong one. Wrought with teenage hormones, everything is a huge deal, and the fact that she doesn't have life figured out right now is only adding to her angst.
While you cannot tell your teen to what to do with her life, there are some things you can do to help mitigate the angst and turn her away from apathy and back into at least exploring.
In an ideal world, all students would enter their respective schools as equals. Sadly, this is often not the case. What goes on in a student's world within school, outside of school, and indeed, inside their internal world, has a direct influence on what happens at school. It is a simple fact that if a teenager is tired, hungry, unhappy, anxious or ill, their academic performance will probably deteriorate. It is important to remember that help is available and, within extreme situations where a student is not benefiting from their current school, there are other educational choices a parent can make such as different schools, independent study or university model schools, and home schools.
© 2006-2021 LoveToKnow, Corp., except where otherwise noted. All Rights Reserved.
© 2006-2021 LoveToKnow, Corp., except where otherwise noted. All Rights Reserved.
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Teen Teenage School

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