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Kids Growing Up As Teens


Spoony Bard

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Yahoo News Article

 

Zach Plante is close with his parents — he plays baseball with them and, on weekends, helps with work in the small vineyard they keep at their northern California home.

 

Lately, though, his parents have begun to notice subtle changes in their son. Among other things, he's announced that he wants to grow his hair longer — and sometimes greets his father with "Yo, Dad!"

 

"Little comments will come out of his mouth that have a bit of that teen swagger," says Tom Plante, Zach's dad.

 

Thing is, Zach isn't a teen. He's 10 years old — one part, a fun-loving fifth-grader who likes to watch the Animal Planet network and play with his dog and pet gecko, the other a soon-to-be middle schooler who wants an iPod.

 

In some ways, it's simply part of a kid's natural journey toward independence. But child development experts say that physical and behavioral changes that would have been typical of teenagers decades ago are now common among "tweens" — kids ages 8 to 12.

 

Some of them are going on "dates" and talking on their own cell phones. They listen to sexually charged pop music, play mature-rated video games and spend time gossiping on ########. And more girls are wearing makeup and clothing that some consider beyond their years.

 

Zach is starting to notice it in his friends, too, especially the way they treat their parents.

 

"A lot of kids can sometimes be annoyed by their parents," he says. "If I'm playing with them at one of their houses, then they kind of ignore their parents. If their parents do them a favor, they might just say, 'OK,' but not notice that much."

 

The shift that's turning tweens into the new teens is complex — and worrisome to parents and some professionals who deal with children. They wonder if kids are equipped to handle the thorny issues that come with the adolescent world.

 

"I'm sure this isn't the first time in history people have been talking about it. But I definitely feel like these kids are growing up faster — and I'm not sure it's always a good thing," says Dr. Liz Alderman, an adolescent medicine specialist at Montefiore Medical Center in New York City. She's been in practice for 16 years and has noticed a gradual but undeniable change in attitude in that time.

 

She and others who study and treat children say the reasons it's happening are both physical and social.

 

Several published studies have found, for instance, that some tweens' bodies are developing faster, with more girls starting menstruation in elementary school — a result doctors often attribute to improved nutrition and, in some cases, obesity. While boys are still being studied, the findings about girls have caused some endocrinologists to lower the limits of early breast development to first or second grade.

 

Along with that, even young children are having to deal with peer pressure and other societal influences.

 

Beyond the drugs, sex and rock'n'roll their boomer and Gen X parents navigated, technology and consumerism have accelerated the pace of life, giving kids easy access to influences that may or may not be parent-approved. Sex, violence and foul language that used to be relegated to late-night viewing and R-rated movies are expected fixtures in everyday TV.

 

And many tweens model what they see, including common plot lines "where the kids are really running the house, not the dysfunctional parents," says Plante, who in addition to being Zach's dad is a psychology professor at Santa Clara University in California's Silicon Valley.

 

He sees the results of all these factors in his private practice frequently.

 

Kids look and dress older. They struggle to process the images of sex, violence and adult humor, even when their parents try to shield them. And sometimes, he says, parents end up encouraging the behavior by failing to set limits — in essence, handing over power to their kids.

 

"You get this kind of perfect storm of variables that would suggest that, yes, kids are becoming teens at an earlier age," Plante says.

 

Natalie Wickstrom, a 10-year-old in suburban Atlanta, says girls her age sometimes wear clothes that are "a little inappropriate." She describes how one friend tied her shirt to show her stomach and "liked to dance, like in rap videos."

 

Girls in her class also talk about not only liking but "having relationships" with boys.

 

"There's no rules, no limitations to what they can do," says Natalie, who's also in fifth grade.

 

Her mom, Billie Wickstrom, says the teen-like behavior of her daughter's peers, influences her daughter — as does parents' willingness to allow it.

 

"Some parents make it hard on those of us who are trying to hold their kids back a bit," she says.

 

So far, she and her husband have resisted letting Natalie get her ears pierced, something many of her friends have already done. Now Natalie is lobbying hard for a cell phone and also wants an iPod.

 

"Sometimes I just think that maybe, if I got one of these things, I could talk about what they talk about," Natalie says of the kids she deems the "popular ones."

 

It's an age-old issue. Kids want to fit in — and younger kids want to be like older kids.

 

But as the limits have been pushed, experts say the stakes also have gotten higher — with parents and tweens having to deal with very grown-up issues such as pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases. Earlier this year, that point hit home when federal officials recommended a vaccine for HPV — a common STD that can lead to cervical cancer — for girls as young as age 9.

 

"Physically, they're adults, but cognitively, they're children," says Alderman, the physician in New York. She's found that cultural influences have affected her own children, too.

 

Earlier this year, her 12-year-old son heard the popular pop song "Promiscuous" and asked her what the word meant.

 

"I mean, it's OK to have that conversation, but when it's constantly playing, it normalizes it," Alderman says.

 

She observes that parents sometimes gravitate to one of two ill-advised extremes — they're either horrified by such questions from their kids, or they "revel" in the teen-like behavior. As an example of the latter reaction, she notes how some parents think it's cute when their daughters wear pants or shorts with words such as "hottie" on the back.

 

"Believe me, I'm a very open-minded person. But it promotes a certain way of thinking about girls and their back sides," Alderman says. "A 12-year-old isn't sexy."

 

With grown-up influences coming from so many different angles — from peers to the Internet and TV — some parents say the trend is difficult to combat.

 

Claire Unterseher, a mother in Chicago, says she only allows her children — including an 8-year-old son and 7-year-old daughter — to watch public television.

 

And yet, already, they're coming home from school asking to download songs she considers more appropriate for teens.

 

"I think I bought my first Abba single when I was 13 or 14 — and here my 7-year-old wants me to download Kelly Clarkson all the time," Unterseher says. "Why are they so interested in all this adult stuff?"

 

Part of it, experts say, is marketing — and tweens are much-sought-after consumers.

 

Advertisers have found that, increasingly, children and teens are influencing the buying decisions in their households — from cars to computers and family vacations. According to 360 Youth, an umbrella organization for various youth marketing groups, tweens represent $51 billion worth of annual spending power on their own from gifts and allowance, and also have a great deal of say about the additional $170 billion spent directly on them each year.

 

Toymakers also have picked up on tweens' interest in older themes and developed toy lines to meet the demand — from dolls known as Bratz to video games with more violence.

 

Diane Levin, a professor of human development and early childhood at Wheelock College in Boston, is among those who've taken aim at toys deemed too violent or sexual.

 

"We've crossed a line. We can no longer avoid it — it's just so in our face," says Levin, author of the upcoming book "So Sexy So Soon: The Sexualization of Childhood."

 

Earlier this year, she and others from a group known as the Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood successfully pressured toy maker Hasbro to drop plans for a line of children's toys modeled after the singing group Pussycat Dolls.

 

Other parents, including Clyde Otis III, are trying their own methods.

 

An attorney with a background in music publishing, Otis has compiled a line of CDs called "Music Talking" that includes classic oldies he believes are interesting to tweens, but age appropriate. Artists include Aretha Franklin, Rose Royce and Blessid Union of Souls.

 

"I don't want to be like a prude. But some of the stuff out there, it's just out of control sometimes," says Otis, a father of three from Maplewood, N.J.

 

"Beyonce singing about bouncing her butt all over the place is a little much — at least for an 8-year-old."

 

In the end, many parents find it tricky to strike a balance between setting limits and allowing their kids to be more independent.

 

Plante, in California, discovered that a few weeks ago when he and Zach rode bikes to school, as the two of them have done since the first day of kindergarten.

 

"You know, dad, you don't have to bike to school with me anymore," Zach said.

 

Plante was taken aback.

 

"It was a poignant moment," he says. "There was this notion of being embarrassed of having parents be too close."

 

Since then, Zach has been riding by himself — a big step in his dad's mind.

 

"Of course, it is hard to let go, but we all need to do so in various ways over time," Plante says, "as long as we do it thoughtfully and lovingly, I suppose."

 

This article makes sooooo much sense. See my generation wasn't much like this. I didn't get a gameboy until I was 12. Cell phone, MP3 Player, and laptop came to me at 18.

 

But kids these days, just amazes me with all the stuff they don't need.

 

-Omi

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I had a nice reply all typed out, but all data was lost when the server froze as I tried to post...

So you'll have to settle with this:

 

 

Wow, that's insane.

 

Uh... Omi, what's promiscuous mean? :???:

 

:P

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... said the man who spends so much of his time on a website for small plastic constructible toys.

Aw man, I was totally going to say exactly that! Oh well, great minds think alike.

 

About the entry... maybe teenagers will start acting like really old people? I have been in need of a cane for support.... My lumbago!

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It's social trends like these that make me grateful I was antisocial and lived under a rock until I was 13.

 

I hate kids like this. They play M-games, dress like homeless people, talk like they're on drugs, some of them probably are on drugs, and they annoy me beyond belief. I hate hearing them talk about popular culture. A 10-year-old should NOT have seen more R-movies than me.

 

Know what the M stands for? MATURE. Most of the teenagers I know that play M-games aren't mature.

 

The logic of this generation is lost on me.

 

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IPB Image

 

Then again, I've almost always hated the "cool kids", no matter what age they act. This has been happening for a while, so at least people are noticing it now.

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Remember I told you that my sister was throwing a tantrum? This is what I'm talking about. She's very poseur gangster. The day before she told me she had a boyfriend. She hasn't even been 13 for a whole month yet!

 

Were we this bad back at that age? I don't remember the Spice Girls being so promiscuous...

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But kids these days, just amazes me with all the stuff they don't need.

Hey, Omi? Walkmans, Sega Genesis and Transformers. Don't tell me our generation didn't have the same number of useless things as this one does. Theirs just has more diodes.

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X freakin' D, I read that article earlier today.

 

Don't look at me, I don't follow pop culture. It's all hip and fad and stuff. :P

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The day before she told me she had a boyfriend. She hasn't even been 13 for a whole month yet!

:o

But kids these days, just amazes me with all the stuff they don't need.

Hey, Omi? Walkmans, Sega Genesis and Transformers. Don't tell me our generation didn't have the same number of useless things as this one does. Theirs just has more diodes.

True, but it wasn't over the top like today.

 

I have seen kids younger than 10 with cell phones. Yeah. Cell Phones. :P

 

-Omi

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Omi, I have been waiting for someone to point all this out.

And, the problem seems to be that the kids probably beg their parents for a cell phone or iPod.

I am going to have to stay the course, which is to remain culture-ly numb, meaning I will not pay attention to the latest "fads".

BTW, I seem to act like someone in their 40's. :P

Alku

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... said the man who spends so much of his time on a website for small plastic constructible toys.

Aw man, I was totally going to say exactly that! Oh well, great minds think alike.

 

About the entry... maybe teenagers will start acting like really old people? I have been in need of a cane for support.... My lumbago!

I LOLed like a llama, right here in the school computer lab.

 

Did you know kids in Finokialand are getting cell phones at age 6?

 

I really worry for the world my own kids will grow up in-- how much worse can it get?

 

-BC

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I just remembered, one time, about a year ago, my sister was helping her friend out at a day-care center. She saw a little four year old boy with a cellphone. She went over to him to see where he got it, and he said "I'm calling my grandma to take me home. This place is boring!" And my sister looked inside of the contacts list, and it said stuff like Mommy, Daddy, grandma, grandpa. The strangest thing is that the family was on well-fare!

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*Sigh* This bloody new generation of kids, it is so gross and sad.

 

I never really got into that growing up stage till I was 13, and I am still not very pressured and is in no need for any relationships with guys until I am older, I didn't even start getting electronics till I was 10. I believe that was when I got my gameboy color. And anything else I need I am working for myself, I really find a cellphone useless until you are getting on your own some more.

 

*sighs again*

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*Sigh* This bloody new generation of kids, it is so gross and sad.

 

I never really got into that growing up stage till I was 13, and I am still not very pressured and is in no need for any relationships with guys until I am older, I didn't even start getting electronics till I was 10. I believe that was when I got my gameboy color. And anything else I need I am working for myself, I really find a cellphone useless until you are getting on your own some more.

 

*sighs again*

About electronics, I never pressure my parents into buying me all different kind of electronics. My PS2, I bought it with the money I earned. A cellphone, my parents will only buy me one when I learn how to drive.

I'm actually the only child in my family that was given any kind of video game.

 

But when my brother was around thirteen, and they gave him and my sisters a computer, woah! It changed his was of thinking forever. :blink: Now he's the best electronics guy in the family. And he works at Verizon Wireless.

 

I'm okay about electronics, and that other fancy stuff. If I do want something, I ask my parents to lend me some cash, and I pay 'em back soon after.

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Very, very sad. I teach children like that: 9-11 year olds that carry around cell phones and dress skimpier than most of the people my age. It's truly scary.

 

I'm glad I didn't turn out like that. Didn't get much electronic-wise (besides one computer for whole family) until about 3 years ago. And even now, I only own a GC and Game Boy Advance, both pre-owned. My family is really trying to stay low on all the electronic stuff.

 

As for the clothes... yeah, if I came home wearing anything showing too much skin, my dad would trash it, then and there, and put me in a pair of overalls or something. Strictness never hurt, and I'd really like to see some boundaries coming up with the parents of all these tweens.

 

And cell phones are not needed until you yourself can afford to pay for it.

 

~Nikira

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I got my first cell phone when I was... 19? 20? Not sure. In any case, my highschool friends only bought theirs when they were 17-18 years old. Heck, I still don't have an mp3 player or a laptop. (The latter I don't need, the former because I'm too lazy. Pop open the discman, switch CDs, close, done. To heck with playlists, uploading, dowloading... I already spend too much time staring at a computer screen.)

Even my six-year-old cousin has an mp3-player she hardly uses (her mother's old one) and a (discounted) PSP with Nintendogs (which she still needs help with as it's in English).

I think I was 14 when I got a console (Sega MegaDrive II), which I paid for myself as well, thank you very much.

 

My future kids will get a decent upbringing. For which they'll hate me forever. :P

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Even my six-year-old cousin has an mp3-player she hardly uses (her mother's old one) and a (discounted) PSP with Nintendogs (which she still needs help with as it's in English).

 

PSP? Nintendogs?

 

Nintendogs is for the DS. :P

 

Yeah, kids these days do have too much. I find it annoying how many of them have iPods that they didn't earn or pay for.

 

Kohaku

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Even my six-year-old cousin has an mp3-player she hardly uses (her mother's old one) and a (discounted) PSP with Nintendogs (which she still needs help with as it's in English).

 

PSP? Nintendogs?

Yeah, kids these days do have too much. I find it annoying how many of them have iPods that they didn't earn or pay for.

 

Kohaku

Yeah, I don't even know three thousand songs! My parents might, but they have karaoke.

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Even my six-year-old cousin has an mp3-player she hardly uses (her mother's old one) and a (discounted) PSP with Nintendogs (which she still needs help with as it's in English).

 

PSP? Nintendogs?

 

Nintendogs is for the DS. :P

Like I care. :P

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It is the culture. I know a pregnant 11 year old. O.o

 

Pretty much parents who are from other countries(thrid wolrd or second world) come to America they are like.....

 

What the heck is going on? Remeber how the sterotype of Americans used to beputting Ketchup on everthing...Well now....The American Steroetypical teen is well....a word I cant use on BZP.

 

I dont have a promblem with he "cool kids". Becuase it hilarious when an Indian tries to act Ghetto.

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Even my six-year-old cousin has an mp3-player she hardly uses (her mother's old one) and a (discounted) PSP with Nintendogs (which she still needs help with as it's in English).

 

PSP? Nintendogs?

 

Nintendogs is for the DS. :P

Like I care. :P

This brings up a really good example. Since you mixed 2 completely different things, you know someone out there will hassle you for it, cuz you aren't "following" the stuff that is the "in crowd".

 

So much stuff will lead to so much confusion.

 

-Omi

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Guest Phyoohrii: Dark Hunter Hunter

Posted

I remember thinking like that when I was 12. Not how 12 year olds think, but how the parents (responsible ones) think. I find it absurd. Kids these days are too spoilt, and exposed to WAY too much from the Dark side (:P).

What also annoys me is that when the kids have their iPod or their phone or whatever (for the record, I choose to have neither; I easily could, but I don't have any interest in them right now), and they keep asking their parents for the latest update. Don't the parents have BUDGETS??? Or control???

And another thing. Children are wanting to get work earlier too. They need to learn that they should stay young for as long as they can. That's what I'm trying to do.

 

IPB Image

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This brings up a really good example. Since you mixed 2 completely different things, you know someone out there will hassle you for it, cuz you aren't "following" the stuff that is the "in crowd".

 

So much stuff will lead to so much confusion.

 

actually, we were just pointing out that he lacks basic human knowledge.

 

And seeing as I am officially a teenager as of today, I don't have anything to say.

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actually, we were just pointing out that he lacks basic human knowledge.

Actually not knowing that you need air to live means a lack of basic human knowledge.

 

Not knowing that Nintendogs is for DS only is exactly what this article is talking about perse.

 

-Omi

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