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Rites of passage.


For years sociologists, anthropologists, and psychologists have mourned the loss of traditions marking important childhood "rites of passage." In earlier American culture, movement toward adulthood was accompanied by more ritualistic rit·u·al·is·tic  
adj.
1. Relating to ritual or ritualism.

2. Advocating or practicing ritual.



rit
, meaningful celebrations of transition to newfound new·found  
adj.
Recently discovered: a newfound pastime.

Adj. 1. newfound - newly discovered; "his newfound aggressiveness"; "Hudson pointed his ship down the coast of the newfound sea"
 independence and responsibility to the family and community.

In an increasingly complex, dispersed dis·perse  
v. dis·persed, dis·pers·ing, dis·pers·es

v.tr.
1.
a. To drive off or scatter in different directions: The police dispersed the crowd.

b.
, and fast-paced society, summer camp remains one of the final frontiers for young people seeking formal affirmation of advancing maturity and, ultimately, initiation into adulthood. Through structured, goal-oriented activities taught and supervised by authority figures and role models, children at camp benefit from communal observance of achievement--whether in small-group or all-camp settings.

Nurturing Good Behavior Orderly and lawful action; conduct that is deemed proper for a peaceful and law-abiding individual.

The definition of good behavior depends upon how the phrase is used.


These are not insignificant observations for parents seeking for their children environments that are both rife rife  
adj. rif·er, rif·est
1. In widespread existence, practice, or use; increasingly prevalent.

2. Abundant or numerous.
 with opportunities for growth and nurturing of behaviors that hold the promise of making poor choices less likely. Indeed, absent reasonable recognition of their early milestones, many young people seek alternative routes to "maturity," including drinking, drugging, dangerous driving, and early intimate sexual behavior sexual behavior A person's sexual practices–ie, whether he/she engages in heterosexual or homosexual activity. See Sex life, Sexual life. .

Partnering With Parent--Youth Development at Summer Camp

The truth is that while parents offer the first, best shot of positively influencing youth, other influential adults may offer the best, last shot. Where's the proof? Working in tandem Adv. 1. in tandem - one behind the other; "ride tandem on a bicycle built for two"; "riding horses down the path in tandem"
tandem
, parents and camp professionals have achieved success toward realization of the critical youth development goals identified by ACA ACA - Application Control Architecture  in Directions: Youth Development

Outcomes of the Camp Experience.

In a study of more than five thousand families from eighty ACA-accredited camps conducted between 2001 and 2004, parents, camp staff, and children reported significant growth in many of these important areas. Sense of Self

The value of childhood gains in identity, independence, and peer relationships is similarly highlighted in a SADD/Liberty Mutual Teens Today study linking each to an overall "Sense of Self." That report found that young people with a high Sense of Self more often report feeling smart, successful, responsible, and confident than do their low Sense of Self counterparts. They also more frequently cite positive relationships with parents and are more likely to avoid alcohol and drug use. Of course, parental involvement strongly correlates with teens' Sense of Self and the decisions they make.

Just as important, the data points to the value of the summer camp experience and the role that counselors play in positively enhancing a child's Sense of Self by:

* Supporting a wide sampling of interests, activities, and age-appropriate behaviors;

* Encouraging separation from parents and age-appropriate independence in decision-making; and

* Teaching peer-to-peer social skills and facilitating (positive) peer relationships.

Positive Risk-Taking

Also corroborating the efficacy of ACA's findings is SADD/Liberty Mutual data suggesting that young people who take the very types of positive risks that camps promote are 20 percent more likely to avoid destructive behaviors than are those who do not. They are also more likely to describe themselves in positive terms and to report they often feel happy.

Adult Inattention in·at·ten·tion  
n.
Lack of attention, notice, or regard.

Noun 1. inattention - lack of attention
basic cognitive process - cognitive processes involved in obtaining and storing knowledge


Despite overwhelming evidence of the saliency sa·li·ence   also sa·li·en·cy
n. pl. sa·li·en·ces also sa·li·en·cies
1. The quality or condition of being salient.

2. A pronounced feature or part; a highlight.

Noun 1.
 of adult attention, a new Teens Today report from SADD SADD Students Against Destructive Decisions (formerly Students Against Drunk Driving)
SADD Students Against Drunk Driving (now Students Against Destructive Decisions)
SADD Sexual Attention Deficit Disorder
 and Liberty Mutual Group reveals that almost half of high school teens say that their mom and dad miss the boat when it comes to communicating about and recognizing or celebrating what they consider to be meaningful life events during their adolescence. Not surprisingly, these teens are more likely to engage in destructive behaviors.

According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the study, high school teens whose parents pay the least attention--42 percent--to significant transition periods, such as puberty puberty (py`bərtē), period during which the onset of sexual maturity occurs. , school change, and key birthdays, are more likely than teens whose parents pay the most attention--18 percent--to engage in high-risk behaviors high-risk behavior Public health A lifestyle activity that places a person at ↑ risk of suffering a particular condition. See Safe sex practices.  such as alcohol and drug use. They are also more likely to engage in early sexual activity.

The Teens Today research also highlights the effect of attention on another significant teen rite of passage rite of passage
n.
A ritual or ceremony signifying an event in a person's life indicative of a transition from one stage to another, as from adolescence to adulthood.
: driving. For example, teen drivers who report high levels of parental attention are significantly more likely than those who report low levels of parental attention to say they never speed (45 percent vs. 14 percent). The data also suggests that these teens are more likely to wear seat belts while driving and are less likely to drive while impaired or to ride in a car with an impaired driver.

Mental Health

Young people who receive the least attention also appear susceptible to feelings of boredom Boredom
See also Futility.

Aldegonde, Lord St.

bored nobleman, empty of pursuits. [Br. Lit.: Lothair]

Baudelaire, Charles

(1821–1867) French poet whose dissipated lifestyle led to inner despair. [Fr. Lit.
 and depression and are more than twice as likely to report daily stress. Conversely con·verse 1  
intr.v. con·versed, con·vers·ing, con·vers·es
1. To engage in a spoken exchange of thoughts, ideas, or feelings; talk. See Synonyms at speak.

2.
, teens who receive the most attention are significantly more likely to say they feel happy every day or almost every day.

What About Younger Children?

While younger teens also report inattention (fewer than one in three middle school students cites high levels of attention), they tend to fare better than their high school counterparts. This trend supports the thesis that a "pseudomaturity" imposed on older adolescents, in part by a society that applies an ever-pervasive pressure to succeed, leads even the most caring of adults to doubt the necessity of paying much attention to growing teens.

Along with a shorter childhood, ushered out by a typically younger onset of puberty, and an extended adolescence, ushered in by an increasingly protective culture and elongated e·lon·gate  
tr. & intr.v. e·lon·gat·ed, e·lon·gat·ing, e·lon·gates
To make or grow longer.

adj. or elongated
1. Made longer; extended.

2. Having more length than width; slender.
 academic preparation, this detachment has brought about a vast, vague period of human development. It is during this time, more than ever before, that young people seek out acceptance into adulthood, anxious to demonstrate their almost-adult status.

Other Significant Adults

While young people need, and desperately want, their parents to pay adequate attention to the "important" things (some say their parents pay too much attention to the "wrong" things), they also look to other important adults as barometers of their progress in an uncertain world. Much of what they think of themselves during this critical transition phase is a direct reflection of how they believe others--including their camp counselors--perceive them. That is precisely why camp staff is uniquely empowered to satisfy at least some of the attention needs of children as they climb the ladder toward adulthood, conquering a seemingly endless array of developmental "tasks" along the way.

Rites of Passage and Summer Camps

There are three important ways in which summer camps--and their staffs--can help young people enjoy safe, healthy rites of passage.

First, they can recognize key adolescent life-transitions. Counselors can aid teens in building bridges between whom they were, whom they are, and whom they are becoming. In turn, those connections help teens to crystallize crys·tal·lize also crys·tal·ize  
v. crys·tal·lized also crys·tal·ized, crys·tal·liz·ing also crys·tal·iz·ing, crys·tal·liz·es also crys·tal·iz·es

v.tr.
1.
 their search for identity and purpose, preparing them for a less egocentric egocentric /ego·cen·tric/ (-sen´trik) self-centered; preoccupied with one's own interests and needs; lacking concern for others.

e·go·cen·tric
adj.
, more collectivist col·lec·tiv·ism  
n.
The principles or system of ownership and control of the means of production and distribution by the people collectively, usually under the supervision of a government.
 role in society.

Secondly, they can encourage campers' participation in activities embedded Inserted into. See embedded system.  with opportunities of measurable progression toward accomplishment of standardized standardized

pertaining to data that have been submitted to standardization procedures.


standardized morbidity rate
see morbidity rate.

standardized mortality rate
see mortality rate.
 achievements (e.g., awards) or goals (e.g., completion of projects).

Finally, they can offer unique opportunities for increased responsibility--especially for younger campers--they may not have elsewhere and that carry with them inherent feelings of maturity and independence.

Tradition and Ceremony

Summer camps are chock-full of meaningful age-related traditions--and accompanying ceremony--that help young people to mark progress while demonstrating to others that they are, in fact, growing up. Traditional recognitions of passage link generations through tangible representations of physical, and sometimes subtle, social and emotional change.

Advances and Retreats

Easier said than done? For sure. Actually pinpointing when transitions have taken place can be tricky.

In an adult narrative describing the experience of youth, Kevin Arnold, the principal subject of the 90s hit television show The Wonder Years, noted, "Growing up is not so much a straight line as a series of advances and retreats." This is a keen observation on adolescent movement toward adulthood.

Most people tend to think of maturation maturation /mat·u·ra·tion/ (mach-u-ra´shun)
1. the process of becoming mature.

2. attainment of emotional and intellectual maturity.

3.
 as linear, beginning at point A and ending at point Z. In reality, as young people mature they move back and forth along a continuum of growth, showing demonstrable de·mon·stra·ble  
adj.
1. Capable of being demonstrated or proved: demonstrable truths.

2. Obvious or apparent: demonstrable lies.
 signs of progress one day, only to awaken the next seemingly further behind. This phenomenon marks both their uncertainty with all things new (physical, social, and emotional) and their antipathy toward the whole developmental process to begin with.

Understanding that movement and the context in which it occurs is critical in recognizing the challenges teens face in their daily lives and what may or may not constitute important passages.

Identify significant teen transitions.

Important transitions in adolescence can be a one-time thing, such as a first date, first job, or first driver's license Noun 1. driver's license - a license authorizing the bearer to drive a motor vehicle
driver's licence, driving licence, driving license

license, permit, licence - a legal document giving official permission to do something

, or the gradual progression toward maturity. Figuring out which transitions are most important to your camper is a critical first step in helping him or her transition to adulthood. What "counts" for one young person may not matter much to another. Here are some things to keep in mind:

* Tune in to the things that seem important in his daily life.

* Notice how she spends her days so you can flag changes.

* Ask how he feels about different transitions.

* Note how she talks about transitions with friends.

* Talk about important transitions in your own adolescence.

* Watch for signs of happiness, joy, stress, anxiety, or depression surrounding change.

Communicate about and recognize or celebrate important life events. Sending the message that you are "dialed in" to your campers as they take significant steps along the path to adulthood is an important way to say, "I care about you, and I hear you!" Teens look for signals that they are making real progress toward becoming adults and care very much what you think about them, even if they don't always show it. Here is what you can do:

* Talk regularly--and casually (they hate "the big talk")--about the transitions you see them tackling.

* Recognize these transitions through small privileges, words, or deeds.

* Celebrate group transitions with a pizza party, special activity, or assembly talk.

Growing Up in the Twenty-First Century

In a culture largely devoid of formal "rites of passage," and too often unobservant of the few that exist, young people may make up their own. Far too frequently they include drinking, drugging, and other potentially destructive behaviors. By paying attention Noun 1. paying attention - paying particular notice (as to children or helpless people); "his attentiveness to her wishes"; "he spends without heed to the consequences"
attentiveness, heed, regard
 to the important transitions of childhood and adolescence, influential adults--including camp professionals--can make it less likely that poor choices will become a child's self-constructed mileposts along the path to adulthood.

Encouragingly, six years of SADD/Liberty Mutual research make clear the incredibly influential role that caring adults can play in guiding young people toward safe, healthy choices. This latest report provides even clearer examples of how--underscoring the payoff for paying attention.

Tips for Adolescent Transitions

Identify important transitions.

Communicate about or recognize and celebrate these important life events.

Encourage young people to explore the many healthy growth opportunities typically offered in the summer-camp setting.

SADD

SADD, Inc. (Students Against Destructive Decisions <includeonly></includeonly>Students Against Destructive Decisions is a peer-to-peer youth education and substance abuse use prevention organization in the USA, with over 10,000 chapters in middle schools, high schools, and colleges. ) sponsors peer-to-peer education and prevention programs in ten thousand chapters in middle schools, high schools, and colleges nationwide.

Liberty Mutual Group is one of the largest multi-line insurers in the property and casualty industry. Offering a wide range of products and services, including private passenger auto and homeowners insurance, Liberty Mutual Group employs 37,000 people in more than 900 offices throughout the world.

[c] Summit Communications Management Communications management is the systematic planning, implementing, monitoring, and revision of all the channels of communication within an organization, and between organizations; it also includes the organization and dissemination of new communication directives connected with an  Corporation * 2006 All Rights Reserved

Teens Today is an annual study sponsored by SADD (Students Against Destructive Decisions) and Liberty Mutual Group of adolescent attitudes and behaviors. This unique coupling of a national nonprofit A corporation or an association that conducts business for the benefit of the general public without shareholders and without a profit motive.

Nonprofits are also called not-for-profit corporations. Nonprofit corporations are created according to state law.
 youth peer-to-peer education and prevention organization with a Fortune 500 insurance company has yielded a body of work widely recognized as an important barometer of the world in which our teens live and of the challenges they face.

The Teens Today methodology, implemented by Atlantic Research & Consulting, Inc. (2000-2005) of Boston and Roper/ASW of New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 (2003) included both qualitative research Qualitative research

Traditional analysis of firm-specific prospects for future earnings. It may be based on data collected by the analysts, there is no formal quantitative framework used to generate projections.
 (focus groups and/or in-depth interviews) in Atlanta, Boston, Charlotte, Chicago, Dallas, Denver, Houston, Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. , Miami, Minneapolis, New York, Phoenix, San Diego San Diego (săn dēā`gō), city (1990 pop. 1,110,549), seat of San Diego co., S Calif., on San Diego Bay; inc. 1850. San Diego includes the unincorporated communities of La Jolla and Spring Valley. Coronado is across the bay. , San Francisco San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden , Seattle, and Tampa and quantitative surveys administered to more than 10,000 middle and high school students--and almost 2,000 parents--nationwide.

More information about Teens Today research can be found at www.sadd.org and www.libertymutualinsurance.com.

Stephen Wallace, M.S.Ed., national chairman and chief executive officer of SADD, Inc. (Students Against Destructive Decisions), has broad experience as a school psychologist and adolescent counselor. He directs the annual Teens Today research project, a partnership of SADD and Liberty Mutual Group, serves as an adjunct professor of psychology at Mount Ida College Mount Ida's athletes compete as the Mustangs in the North Atlantic Conference of NCAA Division III. History
Mount Ida College was founded in 1899 as a private women's high school on Mount Ida Hill in Newton Corner, Massachusetts.
, and is director of counseling and counselor training at the Cape Cod Cape Cod, narrow peninsula of glacial origin, 399 sq mi (1,033 sq km), SE Mass., extending 65 mi (105 km) E and N into the Atlantic Ocean. It is generally flat, with sand dunes, low hills, and numerous lakes.  Sea Camps in Brewster, Massachusetts Brewster is a town in Barnstable County, Massachusetts, Barnstable County being coextensive with Cape Cod. The population was 10,094 at the 2000 census.

Brewster is twinned with the town of Budleigh Salterton in the United Kingdom.
.

Originally published in the 2006 May/June issue of Camping Magazine.

Other Key Findings From Teens Today

Parents and Teens ... Relationships, Communication, Trust, and Truth

High school teens whose parents communicate about and recognize or celebrate important transitions are significantly more likely than other teens to ...

* Report having an extremely close relationship with their parents (55 percent vs. 25 percent).

* Say they have excellent communication with their parents (49 percent vs. 22 percent).

* State their parents talk to them about their concerns associated with drinking and driving (95 percent vs. 79 percent); using marijuana marijuana or marihuana, drug obtained from the flowering tops, stems, and leaves of the hemp plant, Cannabis sativa (see hemp) or C. indica; the latter species can withstand colder climates.  (94 percent vs. 76 percent), using marijuana and driving (89 percent vs. 47 percent); illegally using prescription drugs prescription drug Prescription medication Pharmacology An FDA-approved drug which must, by federal law or regulation, be dispensed only pursuant to a prescription–eg, finished dose form and active ingredients subject to the provisos of the Federal Food, Drug,  (85 percent vs. 38 percent) or other drugs (95 percent vs. 63 percent); and having sexual intercourse sexual intercourse
 or coitus or copulation

Act in which the male reproductive organ enters the female reproductive tract (see reproductive system).
 (93 percent vs. 74 percent); oral sex (75 percent vs. 47 percent); and other sexual activity (71 percent vs. 49 percent).

* Be influenced by parents not to drink (87 percent vs. 53 percent) or use drugs (91 percent vs. 69 percent).

* Be honest with their parents about what they are doing and with whom they are spending time "Spending Time" is the first single released by Christian artist Stellar Kart.

The lyrics describe the band members desire to spend "more time with God". "Sometimes it’s a real struggle to spend time with God.
 (96 percent vs. 77 percent).

Teens and Mental Health ... Feeling Happy, Stressed, Bored, and Depressed

High school teens whose parents communicate about and recognize or celebrate important transitions are significantly more likely than other teens to say they feel happy every day or almost every day (83 percent vs. 49 percent) and less likely to ...

* Say they feel bored every day or almost every day (11 percent vs. 25 percent).

* Report they feel stressed (11 percent vs. 29 percent) every day or almost every day.

* State they feel depressed at least once per week (11 percent vs. 21 percent).

Rites of Passage ... Positive Risk-Taking and Sense of Self

High school teens whose parents communicate about and recognize or celebrate important transitions are significantly more likely than other teens to ...

* Take positive risks (28 percent vs. 11 percent).

* Have a high sense of self (67 percent vs. 22 percent).

Teens Today 2004 revealed that teens who take positive risks in their lives, their school, and their communities are 20 percent more likely than other teens to avoid alcohol and drugs and to describe their driving as safe. Teens Today 2003 revealed that young people with a high Sense of Self are significantly more likely than other teens to avoid alcohol and drugs and to feel positive about their own identity, growing independence, and relationships with peers.

Rites of Passage ... Middle School Teens

Middle school teens whose parents communicate about and recognize or celebrate important transitions are significantly more likely than other teens to ...

* Report they have an extremely close relationship with their parents (69 percent vs. 2 percent).

* Say they have excellent communication with their parents (55 percent vs. 12 percent).

* Say their parents talk to them about their concerns associated with drinking (95 percent vs. 80 percent); drinking and driving (89 percent vs. 66 percent), using marijuana and driving (79 percent vs. 46 percent); illegally using prescription drugs (83 percent vs. 51 percent); and using other drugs (92 percent vs. 72 percent).

* Be influenced by parents not to drink (96 percent vs. 73 percent) or use drugs (98 percent vs. 74 percent).

* Be honest with their parents about what they are doing and with whom they are spending time (96 percent vs. 84 percent).

* Feel happy every day or almost every day (83 percent vs. 55 percent).

[c] Summit Communications Management Corporation * 2006 All Rights Reserved

Stephen Wallace, M.S.Ed., national chairman and chief executive officer of SADD, Inc. (Students Against Destructive Decisions), has broad experience as a school psychologist and adolescent counselor. He directs the annual Teens Today research project, a partnership of SADD and Liberty Mutual Group, serves as an adjunct professor of psychology at Mount Ida College, and is director of counseling and counselor training at the Cape Cod Sea Camps in Brewster, Massachusetts.

Originally published in the 2006 May/June issue of Camping Magazine.
Youth Development at Summer Camp

Positive Identity    Physical & Thinking Skills

Self-Esteem          Adventure & Exploration
Independence         Environmental Awareness

Social Skills

Leadership           Values & Decisions
Friendship Skills    Spirituality
Social Comfort
Peer Relationships

TEEN RISKY

                     Low Attention   High Attention

Alcohol                   36%             17%
Marijuana                 16%              3%
Prescription Drugs        28%              5%

Note: Table made from bar graph.

TEEN EMOTIONAL

            Low Attention   High Attention

Stressed        29%             11%
Depressed       21%             11%
Bored           25%             11%
Happy           49%             83%

Note: Table made from bar graph.
COPYRIGHT 2006 American Camping Association
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:for American childrens
Author:Wallace, Stephen
Publication:Camping Magazine
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:May 1, 2006
Words:2792
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