I find it enigmatic hearing the stereotype that teenagers are lazy and not hard working and the topic has become ubiquitous in the past few years. Mostly adults view teenagers as lackadaisical, emotional, and lacking work ethic, which is not plausible. This generation of teenagers will need to work harder and deal with more stress than any previous generation to get a decent job, own a house, and have a family without being severely in debt most of their life, and yet they’re considered lazy. Studies show that today’s teenagers may be the hardest working individuals the United States has seen. Adults consider teenagers lazy and spoiled, but consider these figures: in the year 1976 the cost of one year of tuition at the University of California …show more content…
For example, my parents will not allow me to work at a grocery store or fast food restaurant, so I will likely never experience what Barbara Ehrenreich did in Florida. I’m not allowed to work during the school year due to my parents do not want me having to worry about school, sports, and a job. This situation leaves me to work for the short three months of summer and make the money I earn during the summer last the rest of the year to pay for gas and activities with friends. My parents have always been hard working just as Mike Rose’s parents, but I am hoping I am the child with the glow in Potato Eaters, I hope to be the one who takes a path other than the blue collar road my parents have paved for me. With the limiting of my options for work I have the job of working in my uncle’s mechanic shop in eastern Washington, however I am away from my friends for 90% of the summer and make $5.00 an hour, 50 hours a week, around $2,750 a summer, which I must make last the other nine months of the year. Coming from a predominantly blue collar family is likely the reason that I am so limited in my choice of work as a teenager, and the roots of my “individualistic” attitude, which causes me to have to pay for just about everything by myself. I have the same view of my parents as Seamus Heaney did in the poem Digging, I admire their work beyond belief, but that kind of work is not for
They start spending that money on a lot of things except for anything educational which is a very alarming situation for them and for their parents as well. Their parents need to know how they are spending that money and how they should be sending that money. Most of the time the only reason why teenagers start working is because they want to save money for their college studies. Studies revealed that teenagers have considered working here as a great learning experience for them but the writer has completely ignored that aspect as well. According to him, most teens working at places like McDonalds is not provoking sense of responsibility instead it is giving them a shortcut to avoid studies and start earning with little or no education at all.
The circumstances people face in their youth challenge them to overcome societal views. Financial structures in which people are raised will determine their advantage or disadvantage in society. As a child one’s image is based on their parents’ success or failure.
Interviewer: First question and I’m going to go off script a little bit, I always do; I think you get better information that way. So, first off, do you remember using it, do you remember using it all back in – Interviewee: You gave me two case numbers and I remember using one.
In order to barely make ends meet, many worked around the clock at a minimum wage job. My parents worked long hours for 7 days a week. Despite the lack of time family time, my parents managed to instill a love for education in me and motivated me to pursue my dreams despite how unlikely the odds may seem. The majority of my friends didn’t have the same support system and therefore could not focus on creating a future because the current moment was so unstable and unpredictable. Thus
College takes around 4 years for most, sometimes more, and those years could be years of making money. Years spent in college could be years spent racking up debt for a future that will never exist. A multitude of college graduates don’t actually have a career in the field that they majored in, but still end up in service jobs. Consequently, 57% of 18 to 34 year olds who are not in school and don’t have a bachelor 's degree say they prefer to work and make money rather than go to school (Source F). These high school graduates do not desire to collect debt during their prime working years and would rather find work using their hands.
Over the last fifteen years, I have grown mentally and socially. I credit my growth to my ability to analyze and understand the world for what it is. Social imagination is the use of information to understand the world and ourselves for who we are. Possessing the quality of mind that can develop reason and the capacity to shift perspectives are the basis of social imagination (Mills 2000). As I mentioned in reflection one, I came to realize that my way of thinking is what helped me overcome living a poor lifestyle.
The article,”Teenagers’ Work Can Have Downsides” written by Jerald G. Bachman, discusses many advantages and disadvantages of working as a teenager. Although, Bachman has good reasonings for both sides, teenagers should be able work. There are good outcomes that come from teenagers having a job, they can learn many useful skills that they can use in the future. They could be saving up money to help pay for college. Having a job can help students become more responsible.
It was January 29th, 2012, and I felt as though I was just thrown under a bus. My life as I knew it, was changed forever. This metaphorical bus taught me a lesson... that being loyal, and doing the right thing, aren’t always the same. People try to live up to a standard, but most of the time, this is just the societal norm. Being faithful in a friendship, can conventionally be necessary, but it's never worth lying over, and that's where I went wrong.
The Youth of Today, we’re not stoned, we’re just really cool. When taking a quick scan over the headlines from the last year, most are lead to believe that today's youth, do drugs, drink, fight and have sex, because they are simply bored. The newspapers are only taking into account the negative things surrounding adolescents, instead of a positive light. The stereotype of teenagers today is quite similar to what is was in the 60s.
Everyone throughout their lives has gone through difficult phases in which have helped them see the world in a different way. For example, people have become better after getting past obstacles, they are able to prepare themselves for what’s to come later in life, and they are able to become successful in life. At some point in life, every person has though tab our giving up due to circumstances that have been concurring frequently during a period of time; therefore, people think that there are no good things in life left. For example, when my mother was younger she had to live with my grandfather’s cousin because my grandparents were moving up north for the season and they did not want my mother to make their trip more difficult than what it would
I have many personal values that I have maintained throughout middle school. These personal values have helped me get through middle school, and helped with many various things on my journey to middle school. My first personal value that I’ve maintained is my religion. This is a very important personal value to me, because it is what I believe in.
My whole life, I have always been required to be proud of my ethnicity. I am 18 years old now, and I am an American citizen. However, ask me where I am from and I will tell you, “I’m Mexican.” I say that because my family is and I have been taught to do so. It has become a natural habit of mine and others as well.
My high school in suburbia, despite its efforts through METCO, a program which busses inner-city kids to schools like Lincoln-Sudbury, is not very diverse. So, when a volatile Black Lives Matter protest broke out in the hallway, it took me by surprise. An affluent, primarily white high school is not often forced to confront racial issues. A group of students, both black and white, gathered next to our cafeteria carrying signs and chanting various, now nationally famous, slogans. As I walked by the ensemble, I was shocked at the various insults being thrown back and forth between protesters and passersby.
According to the article “America, though Challenged, still the land of Opportunity,” states “The presence of opportunities may influence an individual’s prospects for the future, but the culture of a family or community affects the extent to which the individual takes advantage of those opportunities” (DeMint, 2014). DeMint’s raised by his mother and despite of their economical struggle, she always worked hard for everything they had which showed him the value of work and the responsibilities that come along with it. Furthermore, in the reading “America- The Land of Opportunity,” states “Today we seem to have a struggling generation of young people who do not have good jobs, heath insurance, pensions, houses or hope” (Ayres, 2014). Many individuals thought that if you graduated and worked hard it would be easy to get ahead, but this is not the case.
My Childhood was pretty different than how I live today. I’m a part of a middle class family with two little sisters. Since I am still in high school, I haven’t experienced that much to say that my social class has changed a lot; However, I have watched my father grow in the company he works for. He has worked his way through many barriers created by “elite” people that doubted his intelligence. He had opened a door to many different opportunities such as working for Google and Apple.