1. Executive functioning skills: planning ahead;
organization; execution and completion of projects; informed decision making;
judgment; concentration; and self-monitoring. Qualifier: Half of the neuronal
connections in the pre frontal cortex will be sloughed off in early adolescence,
so harebrained inconsistency is the norm with teens.
2. Independent living skills and self-reliance:
self-management with regard to money, cooking, laundry; public transportation;
and job experience (with job application, interviewing, working hard, accepting
criticism and following directions). Qualifier: Kids will squawk, but parents
should insist on this stuff anyway.
3. Motivation for personal goals: initiative, engagement,
willingness to try new things, persistence, work ethic, commitment, and a drive
to pursue interests and personal development. Qualifier: The teen’s zeal may be
for DJ skills, not physics.
4. Relationship skills and values: ability to maintain
relationships over time; friendship development; conversational ability;
balancing needs of self and other in romantic relationships; and intimacy
skills. Qualifier: Temperament plays a huge role in determining a person’s
appetite for social interaction, but parents can encourage, model and provide a
rich web of relationships for their teens, including those with wise elders.
5. Moral behavior, integrity and character: standing up for
what’s right; conscientiousness; and responsibility for oneself and the less
fortunate. Qualifier: Although the majority of teens will take risks, lie and
break rules during these arousal-seeking years, they will also show remarkable
attachment to “what’s right” — according to them. By the time these kids reach
their mid-twenties, values have shifted, morphed, matured and become integrated
into a system that usually reflects a lot of their parents’ values.
6. Spirituality and a purposeful life: ability to accept
and cope with adversities; emotional resilience; drive for a meaningful life;
and a value on reflection and growth over time. Qualifier: Patience and
parental role modeling are key here (again).
7. Academic skills: basic skills to achieve age-appropriate
educational goals; intellectual curiosity; study habits; and value on learning.
Qualifier: Especially in middle school and during puberty, school performance
may get a bit sketchy, but education is such a high priority that parents
should go to the mat to make sure teens are “bonded” to school, establish
homework habits, connect with teachers and do required work.
8. Physical fitness and healthful habits: value and
self-care in relation to exercise, sleep, eating, health maintenance, and
limitations on risk taking, substance use and media overuse. Qualifier: Parents
can only control so much, but they control resources, so they can supply
healthful food, yank media, insist on full-year athletic participation, and
give consequences for problem substance use.
9. Emotional awareness, reflection and regulation:
recognition and appropriate expression of feelings; empathy for others; ability
to control impulses; and coping with negative emotions. Qualifier: Due to mood
disturbance brought on by hormones and the immaturity of the “impulse control”
center in the teen brain, teens will have tizzies, and parents need to focus on
being supportive coaches and role models for these skills.
10. Social skills: ability to size up interpersonal situations;
cooperation with others; communication skills; conflict resolution skills;
gaining perspective; and accurate self-appraisal in groups. Qualifier: Since
teens are individuating from their parents and constantly irritated with
siblings, motivated practice of these skills will occur in other pro-social
settings (e.g., school, service, extracurricular activities and friendships).


No comments:
Post a Comment