Friday, November 1, 2013

Week 10 Post 2

In chapter 16, the section called "Relationships with Adults" greatly interested me. The first part of this section is about parent-adolescent relationships. It is noted that parent-adolescent relationships are pivotal but they can also be peaceful. In these relationships, arguments are common because parents desire to maintain control over their children while adolescents are seeking independence. Early-adolescence is the time in which parent-adolescent conflict peaks. There is usually bickering about routine day-to-day concerns. Some bickering may indicate a healthy family. By age 18, teenagers' emotional maturity and reduced egocentrism allows them to appreciate their parents. In most cases, parents and teenagers try to balance the need for independence and closeness with less disclosure but improved communication as the adolescent matures. Another part in this section deals with closeness within the family. Family closeness has four aspects which are communication, support, connectedness, and control. Developmentalists agree that communication and support are helpful and maybe even essential. Observers differ about what they see in regards to connectedness and closeness. Parental monitoring is an important issue which is parental knowledge about each child's whereabouts, activities, and companions. When monitoring is part of a warm, supportive relationship, children are likely to become confident, well-educated adults, avoiding drugs and risky sex. Adolescents play an active role in their own monitoring as some are eager to tell their parents about their activities while others are secretive. Monitoring is a good sign if it indicates mutual, close interaction. Monitoring may be harmful when it derives from suspicion and secrecy instead of a warm connection. 

1 comment:

  1. Wow your post was very conceptual on all of the things we have learned throughout this semester thus far. I have mentioned numerous times before that I believe that parental monitoring is crucial. Parents should always know where their children are and what they are up to. Even though this is what causes most conflicts between children and parents, this can help the child avoid risky situations. In my discussion this week, I mentioned that today's technology offers too many capabilities to only be used for the common good. Cellphones create issues with parenting because parents lose the ability to have control over privileges of their children. If a parent wants to truly "ground" their children away from contact with their friends, they would have to take away computers, tablets, music players, phones, gaming systems, smart tvs, e-readers, and now watches. It is so much harder for parents today to control what their children do compared to when we grew up. I was grounded one time and my parents only had to block my AOL access and send me to my room. I had no cellphone, laptop, or any smart device with internet access. I feel that families do not have the opportunities to bond like they used to because of constant social contact outside of the face-to-face environment.

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