Name: Eric Hamilton Article citation: Song, Eun-Young, et al. "Selected Community Characteristics and Underage Drinking." Substance use & misuse 44.2 (2009): 179-94. ProQuest. Web. 27 Oct. 2015. Describe the main point(s) of this article. -Affect community has on underage drinking -How often kids who were surveyed drank in a 30 day period -How household income impacts drinking Primary purpose of the article: The primary purpose of this article is to show how things that makeup a community can lead to underage drinking. It’s attempting to find a definitive cause for underage drinking in kids between the ages of 14 and 20. Main findings/conclusion: The study found that those who had stronger family ties were far less likely to consume alcohol …show more content…
The researchers surveyed a group of kids between the ages of 14 and 20 about their drinking habits over the past 30 days. They asked them a series of questions in order to obtain the information they would need to complete the study. They too the information that was collected and put into easy to read charts and graphs to better illustrate their findings. Describe how this article contributes to your understanding of the criminal or antisocial behavior described in Phase I. This report explains and gives a very good perspective on my underage drinking that I described in phase 1. The guys that I was drinking with were predominantly white and from at least middle class background. Which according to the study make the group that I chose to associate with more likely to be a part of underage drinking and more specifically binge drinking. How do the findings of this article relate to the other articles you read? The article is very much like my other articles in that it offers another view of how often and why children underage drink. It is like my second article in how the community that someone finds themselves in has a direct affect on how often the partake in illegal alcohol …show more content…
They also decided that no matter the parents feelings on drinking kids are just as likely to participate in drinking no matter their parent’s opinion. Basic Description of the methods used in this article. The researchers conducted a CATI (Computer Assisted Telephone Survey) in order to obtain their information from the study group. They covered the area of Maryland, Virginia, and the District of Columbia. The surveyors were able to obtain over a thousand responses from people who were willing to complete the telephone questionnaire. They were asked to answer a bank of questions from which they were able to glean the data that was used in the test. Describe how this article contributes to your understanding of the criminal or antisocial behavior described in Phase I. It directly parallels my experience with underage drinking; because my parents or the parents of my friends were not okay with us drinking underage. This is proof that no matter a parents opinion of whether a child should participant they will do whatever personally suits
As I read this article, I learned that there are a lot of deaths that occur because alcohol fell in the hands of teenagers. I believe we should do everything in our power to prevent these situations purely because all of this can be prevented. I also believe, that a mix of the way California and Tucson handle underage drinking seems to be more successful tactics than others states mentioned. In this article, there was a lot of talk about deaths that occurred while under the influence. I believe this was a good way to write this article to really try to convince people that drinking is very dangerous for teenagers.
Rhetorical Analysis This essay represents an effective piece of argumentation. The author states her purpose by saying teens are not mature enough to handle a lower age to legally drink alcohol. Tag? Joyce Alcantara tries to convince the readers that the age to legally drink should not be altered and assumes that the audience agrees that “Our youths today are the leaders of tomorrow” (468). With that, we must protect our years ahead.
and the author believes “there is no evidence of brain impairment, alcohol dependency, or underage alcohol abuse” Another important claim is that “the problem is not drink – it is the drinker.” The author says that we should not emphasis on alcohol itself but emphasis on the person and its surroundings. In conclusion, the author believes that we should be allowed to think freely about MLDA21 and more responsible alcohol consumption is likely to
Results show that lowering the drinking age has negative impacts on society. One example of a negative effect is binge drinking and unwanted pregnancies. In addition to the negative effect of binge drinking, another negative effect is the number of accidents caused by underage drinkers. As well as binge drinking and the number of accidents cause being negative effects on society, teaching students how to be safe while drinking sounds great, but what are the chances that students will actually
Today in the United States about 4,358 people under the age of 21 years old die each year from alcohol-related car crashes, homicides, suicides, alcohol poisoning, and other injuries such as falls, burns, and even drowning. More than 190,000 people under the age of 21 visited an emergency room for alcohol related reasons in 2008 alone. Alcohol related motor vehicle crashes kill someone every 31 minutes and non-fatally injure someone every two minutes. That’s a lot of people gone because they wanted to go out and party and not think about the consequences ahead. In this essay I’m gonna give you information to why Underage Drinking is very very bad for you.
College presidents from more than 120 US universities are calling on lawmakers to consider lowering the drinking age from 21 back down to 18. The group argues that the current laws actually encourage binge drinking on campus (“President 's Campaign”). The rise of the drinking age from 18 to 21 caused far more problems than it has solved in today 's society. Regardless, crimes are going to be committed, alcohol related or not, but controlling and monitoring it would decrease the crime rate, rather than teenagers drinking secretly, with little to no supervision at all. “ The 21 year drinking age has not reduced drinking on campuses, it has actually probably increased it” says Middlebury president John McCardell.
An issue that has yet to be solved is “Should the minimum drinking age be lowered from twenty-one years to eighteen years?” People have been in controversy over this topic since the late 1900s. The National Minimum Drinking Age Act was passed in 1984, which required states to raise the legal age to purchase and possess alcoholic substances to twenty-one. According to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in 1991 after the Act was passed, the rate of alcohol consumption among people eighteen to twenty years of age dropped from fifty-nine percent to forty percent; the rate of alcohol consumption among people twenty-one to twenty-four years of age dropped from seventy percent to fifty-six percent (www.cdc.gov). More than fifty scientific
The reported issues that accompanied most drinking appeared to be associated with those individuals that were engaging in binge drinking not just ongoing
In Canada, according to Aboriginal survey shows that 73% of First nations were reported that alcohol was an issue in their communities especially in male teenagers. In addition, the rate of drunkenness is as high as twice the Native American adolescent compared to non-native American adolescents. Other research says that Aboriginal youth are particularly susceptible to enormous drinking (Stewart, Simon, Comeau, Collins, & Van Wilgenburg, 2015). Furthermore, a survey that was held by the government that for those 12 and older, the rate of heavy drinking was too high about 43% of the total population of Aboriginal youth on reserve (Statistics Canada,
Alcohol abuse and alcoholism seems like an issue that keeps getting increasingly worse each year in the United States. According to USA Today and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention both say that approximately 6 people die from alcohol poisoning, caused from binge drinking, each day, which amounts to roughly 2,200 people each year. The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism says that “In 2013 an estimated 697,000 adolescents ages 12–17 (2.8 percent of this age group) had an [alcohol use disorder]” (“Alcohol Facts”). Something has to stop and something has to change from preventing this more because 6 people dying each day from binge drinking alone is a lot, not to mention that 12-17 year olds are having alcohol problems at such a young age. Lowering the drinking age will enforce this act even more, promoting more drinking in fact.
But while it has succeeded in that, it is also believed that tougher rules, such as DUI rules and seatbelt safety rules have also played a part in this decrease. However, this higher drinking age hasn’t reduced drinking, its only “driven it underground,” Gabrielle Glaser states in her NY Times article. It has been driven underground to the riskiest settings, high school parties and frat parties that are unsupervised. This age raise segregates the drinking away from adults that can model moderation in drinking. If an 18-year-old high school senior is shown by his/her parent(s) how to drink responsibly and in moderation, I believe that it would greatly help in reducing the chance of making bad decisions by overdoing it, such as driving while drinking.
A poll taken on July 2014 asked the public opinion of US adults for lowering the US legal drinking age from 21 to 18. Approximately 74% of the people opposed the idea, whereas roughly 25% of the people supported the idea ("Public Opinion" 1). The statistics indicate satisfaction among the majority of the people; however, with the current laws many issues arise that must be addressed concerning alcohol use. For starters, studies show an increase of dangerous drinking habits among young adults (Hall 2). In addition, the enforcement of the drinking laws and education on alcohol is insubstantial (Moyse, Fonder 3).
By the time they are high school seniors, seventy-two percent teenagers say they have already consumed alcohol. Proper education at younger ages is needed for our country’s youth to learn the proper use of alcohol through experimentation with their own limits in safe environments.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services acknowledges that there are 10 million teens in the United States drinking regularly and over 20 percent binge drink. ( Teen Alcoholism). This information illustrates the dependence that teens have developed for alcohol and many of them don 't even know the issue that they are building for themselves. The signs that demonstrate that a teen is becoming or is addicted to alcohol are that he/ she is a heavy drinker, they drink regularly for no reason and becoming upset over the removal of accessibility of alcohol.
Jennifer Ortiz Ms.Frandsen English 3, Period 5 6 February 2018 Underage Drinking Drinking can cause severe damages to ones body. Juvenile drinking started in the colonial times since kids and babies drank alcohol as part of their diet.