Peer pressure
- It isn’t all that bad
Helping
your child form positive friendships
Parent
Spot for Parents of Middle School Students
The
middle school years usher in many changes for kids-a more demanding
school workload, increased extracurricular activity, as well as
frequent and often dramatic growth spurts. One of the most
significant changes is your child’s increased desire to socialize.
Middle school is a time when
children begin to make new, more permanent friendships and seek out
peers who will help them define who they are. Although this is a
normal, healthy transition, it can also be unsettling for parents
who may no longer feel their influence is what matters most to their
children.
Most often, peer pressure is
associated with activities we would very much like our kids to
avoid-underage drinking, drug use, smoking, sexual experimentation
and other destructive behaviors. However, peers can have an
important positive influence. A lot depends on who their friends
are. The key becomes finding a way to help guide your children
toward those positive friendships, while allowing them the space to
find their own way socially. Here are some things to try:
Set up opportunities to
connect with your kids. Take a hike outdoors away from the TV or
choose a book that you both can read and talk about. This is a good
way to find out what they are thinking about and what’s happening
in their lives outside the home.
Nurture your children’s
interests in new endeavors. Extracurricular sports and after-school
clubs or enrichment programs are a good place for them to make new
friends with similar interests. It also means they are supervised
and busy with meaningful activities when you are not with them.
Encourage your children to
invite their friends home. If your children are reserved or are
having trouble making new friends, the home court advantage might
make getting to know someone new that much more comfortable. Having
your children’s friends at your home can also give you the peace
of mind of knowing who they are with and what they are doing.
If your children’s friends
are new to you, get to know their families. Make an informal call to
introduce yourself. Say "hello" when other parents drop
their children off at your home and talk with them at school events.
If your schedule permits,
offer to chaperone school events or volunteer at school. These are
wonderful opportunities to see how your children and their friends
socialize and to get to know what interests them.
Do your legwork. If your child
says he or she is going to a friend’s house after school, make a
call to find out if your child has arrived and that there is someone
responsible for supervision.
Helping your
child deal with negative peer pressure
Regardless of how carefully your
children choose their friends, there are going to be times when
someone or something (such as media images, movies and music) might
influence your child in a negative way. Following are some ways
parents can help prepare kids to resist negative pressure:
Allow family members to
express differing opinions. Talking things out allows kids to feel
comfortable about being unique. Kids who aren’t allowed to express
different thoughts or ideas at home will most likely be ill prepared
to resist peer pressure.
- Books such as How to Talk
So Kids Will Listen and Listen So Kids Will Talk by Adele Faber
and Elaine Mazlish and You and Your Adolescent: A Parent’s
Guide for Ages 10 to 20 by Lawrence Steinberg and Ann Levine
include suggestions on how to keep the lines of communication
open with your pre-teen and how to teach decision-making skills.
- Talk openly with your
children about tough issues.
- Role playing can be a fun
way for your children to rehearse their reactions to peer
pressure and other uncomfortable situations. Studies have shown
that when kids are able to "practice" their reactions,
they are more likely to respond assertively in real life.
- If your child has a sudden
change in behavior and you can’t determine its cause, enlist
the help of his or her teachers and guidance counselors who can
be your eyes and ears at school. School professionals can help
provide insight into what’s normal and what isn’t and who or
what your child may be involved with.
For permission to reprint this
article, please contact the Capital Region BOCES Communications
Service by e-mailing us at dbushsuf@gw.neric.org.
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