Report a Bug Give Feedback
A Students Speak Out Commentator Series, Supported by Comcast Foundation
This activity has wrapped up! You can still view, but no additional participation is possible.

Week 3: In the name of maximizing teens’ energy and talent, might it be time to end the concept of “adolescence”?

This Week's Guest:
Photo of Robert Epstein

Dr. Robert Epstein

Founder & Director Emeritus, Cambridge Center for Behavioral Studies

In my book Teen 2.0: Saving Our Children and Families from the Torment of Adolescence, I asserted that adults largely deny teens both the responsibilities and rights of adult life, yet we expect you to be serious about learning (as well as driving, your health, and many other matters). I discuss how “adolescence” was invented to help keep youth out of sweatshops and coal mines, but the long-term effect is that you are trapped you in a phase of life that’s unnecessary, restricting you from achieving a lot for yourselves and for our nation. For example, I found that U.S. teens have 10 times as many restrictions as adults, twice as many as active-duty U.S. marines and twice as many as incarcerated felons!

Consider these stories of “achievement” from a different time: At age 13, Benjamin Franklin finished school in Boston, was apprenticed to his brother, a printer and publisher, and moved immediately into adulthood. John Quincy Adams attended Leiden University in Holland at 13 and at 14 was employed as secretary and interpreter by the American Ambassador to Russia. At 16 he was secretary to the U.S. delegation during the negotiations with Britain that ended the Revolution. Daniel Boone got his first rifle at 12, was an expert hunter at 13, and at 15 made a yearlong trek through the wilderness to begin his career as America's most famous explorer. The list goes on and on.

What do you think? In the name of maximizing teens’ energy and talent, might it be time to end the concept of “adolescence”? Do you feel restricted, or held back from what you might otherwise be accomplishing? If so, in what ways? With less restriction, would you spend your time differently? If given more responsibility and opportunity, would YOU achieve more? How so?

Student Commentator Responses:
Photo of Molly

Molly M.

I believe the youth of today are the most valuable resource to utilize. We experience life as citizens from a whole different perspective than adults. We understand things with a different sense of logic in comparison to adults. However, with the limits placed upon us, it is hard for adults to see how insightful we can be. I believe the concept of adolescence is imaginary, only made up by adults because they do not think we are capable, or mature enough, to handle "adult" tasks. In everyday life, I feel as a teenager we don't have the choice on most of the decisions that impact us. Our school district is cutting 363 teachers on the account of low funding, and the students are the ones being affected the most. However, we did not get a say in how the budget should be handled. Although I understand the logical reasoning behind saving money for the district, our opinions deserve to be heard. There may be possible alternatives to the crisis. With less restriction as a teenager, I would embrace this new found freedom and form partnerships with adults who make important decisions and be sure to put forth a representative voice of youth. I would be sure to achieve more as an advocate for youth and put some of our input on the table.

Photo of Semeo D.

Semeo D.

Personally, I don't believe in the idea, of someone suddenly becoming mature or capable at a certain age. My school is K-12 nd I have seen 6 to 8 year old students put projects together that some teens wouldn't even think of let alone do the work to put together. An example is one child I know who is 7 loves trains and can tell you about all the different models trains have, their gauges, where they are in the world, how old the train is, etc. He's very articulate and outspoken about it to, in a way I find even some adults would have difficulty in doing. I believe when someone truly loves learning about something, they will pursue learning it against all odds, including society's general idea that kids and teens are less responsible or less capable. To put it short and sweetly, I don't feel restricted in accomplishing things and I pursue having more responsibility and opprtunity for things I care about. As for ending the concept of adolescence, I feel it's more important to create educational environments where students of all ages feel able to follow the careers and life goals they want to then to end the "idea" of adolescence..

Photo of Kumar F. K.

Kumar F. K.

Although I sometimes feel like adults put unnecessary restrictions on my life and don't let me make desicions of my own, I think 'adolescence' is an important part of human development. I heard once that the brain of a teenager is closest to the brain of toddler than any other age group. I do not think that it would be the best idea to have people like me be completely free. I know my friends and I sometimes do not make the best descisions and don't think things through fully; this is probably because we are not as mature and ready to take on the whole world as our teachers, parents, and other adults in our lives are. If I had less restriction, I feel like I wouldn't spend my time much differently. I would still spend most of my time doing my homework and messing around outside. The only real difference I can think of is I would probably stop asking adults for permission when I want to do something. I would just head off to a friends' house on my bike without worrying about what the consequences might be. But although I don't think reducing restrictions would have a huge affect on my life, some people I know would run wild and do all kinds of crazy things. For know, I think that the best way teens can accomplish real world projects would be participating in things like this.

Photo of Marie S.

Marie S.

This is an intriguing question, and I'll probably weigh in again when I've had a chance to read Mr. Epstein's book. My kneejerk opinion is this:

I've had a bit of a bumpy adolescence, so I've been grateful to have eight or ten years to make mistakes. On the other hand, it's possible that I've had a bumpy adolescence precisely because I've spent it under the thumb of people who know better, or that I see myself as an overgrown child who needs to cook until she's civilized because I've been told that I am for years.

I am absolutely certain, however, that a number of these arbitrary restrictions for adolscents do need to be lifted, especially where their education is concerned. I probably wouldn't have the world's teenagers turned loose on the world's univerisities, but they can absolutely be trusted to collaborate with teachers and dicate their own curricula.

This is, essentially, the mission of my high school, which celebrated its fourtieth anniversary this year. The high school program at Jefferson County Open School centers on six intensive projects that are known as Passages, each with a broad theme. (Adventure, Career Exploration, Creativity, Global Awareness, Logical Inquiry and Practical Skills for those of you keeping score at home). Students are free to design their own projects within these themes. This year alone, students have embarked on slam poetry tours, taught classes in indigenous history, created full-scale wheatpaste murals, produced public-access televison shows and written novels through this program, and these are only the first few examples that spring to mind. My fellow students manage such dazzling accomplishments because they are permitted to find and explore their own passions instead of meeting one-size-fits-all requirements dreamed up by their elders in some misaimed attempt at producing "well-rounded" young people.

Photo of Sara W.

Sara W.

I think adolescence is an important time for teenagers to make mistakes and see consequences. If we were just catapulted into adulthood, there would be a lot less wiggle room to try new things, because obviously not everything works out. As an adolescent I feel less pressure to be so accomplished and I appreciate that a little less is expected of me because I can take the opportunities I'm not so sure about, and hey if it doesn't work out, it's still okay. While restrictions can be annoying, I like having a few years to be free of the responsibility I will have for many more.

Photo of Miriam O.

Miriam O.

As like us teenagers, adolescence is the perfect time to make mistakes. We are not like adults that have experience in this world. We try new things and mess up but we learn from it. I still have a lot of years in the future to go and i am going through my own abolescent right now. I often think do teens try to be adult already? Yes they do but they really should just do their own thing in ths world. Trying news things are ok and if you mess up. . . its ok cause you still have a long way to live in the future. An then we learn from it and wont do it again, i have done this many times and learning from the best is good! Growing up is how it works we cant stop it we learn from it.

Join in the Conversation!

Post your own reply below. We encourage asking questions and respectful challenges.

This activity has wrapped up. Unfortunately, no further comments are possible.

Dr. Eptstein,

Thank you very much for the clarification regarding brain development. The point you brought up about environmental events affecting brain structure and chemistry really caught my attention, as I have previously not known much about brain development whatsoever. Are there any resources or materials you would recommend? I would like to do a little bit of research about this subject in particular.

    There is no evidence to support the recent claim that irresponsible behavior by teens is caused by properties of the developing brain, and there is certainly overwhelming evidence that "adolescence" is an unnecessary stage of life.  Anthropological studies show that the kind of turmoil we see in teens in many Western countries is entirely absent in more than a hundred cultures around the world; if teen turmoil were the inevitable product of the developing brain, we would see such turmoil everywhere, but we do not.  The fact that the teen brain differs in some respects from that of young children and older adults tells us nothing at all about the causes of teen turmoil.  Difference alone reveals nothing about causation; the brain scientists who have claimed otherwise have mistakenly connected the differences they see in teen brains with cultural biases about the dysfunctional teen, thus improperly drawing conclusions about causation from a mere correlation - the kind of blatant error students are typically warned about during their very first year of university training.  Environmental events alter brain chemistry and structure; thus, some characteristics of the teen brain may actually be the result of the bizarre lifestyle that we force our teens to live rather than the cause of that lifestyle.  New research suggests that teens who are prone to take risks may actually have brains that are more mature in some respects than the brains of more passive teens.  The problems we see among Western teens are entirely the result two recent social phenomena:  first, we infantilize teens - that is, treat them like young children - long after puberty, no matter how capable or mature they may be as individuals; second, we isolate teens from responsible adults, trapping them in the bizarre, media-controlled world of their peers.  The period of life Westerners call "adolescence" is a harmful and unnecessary product of a faulty culture, not of a faulty brain.  A few of you seem to have bought into the idea - promoted heavily by drug companies in their effort to get your parents to put you on prescription medication - that you are inherently defective.  It simply isn't so.  /re

     

      Matthew -- welcome back. I really missed your contributions last week.

      You said a lot worth considering. Here's something for you and Kumar to think about, from our question-asker-of-the-week, Dr. Robert Epstein: The Myth of The Teen Brain 

      I'd love to get your reaction!

        I second the notion that 'adolescence' is a necessary time in peoples lives for more philosophical reasons, even though there definitely are unnecessary restrictions. I believe that adolescence is a time when teenagers, or "adolescents", are allowed to develop their own belief systems, learn from experiences in the freedoms that they do have and experience the guidance that their parents and other members of society offer (maybe forcefully at times) for a few more years. 

        Personally, I feel that catapulting people straight from childhood into adulthood is simply too drastic a change, that people need the transition years to make the adjustment. According to an article in Newsweek magazine published two weeks ago, an article described how the human brain-most notably the lobes that control emotions and maturity-does not fully develop until age 25. That's a long time after "childhood" ends, and making that leap too early may have severe consequences.

        However, I feel that "adolescence" may be too long of a phase as it stands in society. Being educated in a traditional high school setting, I feel that four years is long and monotonous and I'm ready for what comes next (college), but I wouldn't have been ready for that leap and increased responsibility one or two years ago. This period of my life has been instrumental in allowing me to define my spiritual beliefs and societal beliefs and I feel that jumping straight into adulthood would have denied me that opportunity. 

        I definitely agree with Marie that students should be granted the freedom to responsibly work with teachers to create curricula that is most beneficent to the student, as opposed to curricula created solely by the teacher. This may possibly create a new level of creative thinking and learning-something public schooling seems to be desperately lacking. As frustrating as some restrictions are, especially those put in place by our parents, I think they are mostly necessary to keep us safe and out of trouble.

          Semeo -- Thanks for getting the conversation rolling this week. I noticed a similar pattern and want to ask you all to follow up -- what might you be doing if you weren't in "adolescence" (if "adolescence" just didn't exist)? People are out there calling you all The Dumbest Generation while others are saying you're not dumb, just underutilized. Society (and possibly school) barely allows you to spend your time doing anything productive, some say. Perhaps even the things you are being asked to do in school are the culprit -- even if you are getting good grades!

          In the past our nation has benefitted from the inventions and products of adolescents. Today we might be limiting that as we ask you to accomplish a wide variety of things at a high level of rigor. I wonder if there might be some AMAZING teen scientists out there who might be solving some of our major problems, but are busy learning something else right now. Do you think so?

          So, I ask you Semeo (and others), where do you believe that sense of responsibility you mention will come from? Are school designs like Brooklyn Free School's one way? Epstein, I know, talks about allowing teens to "test out" of adolescence by demonstrating compentencies and from then on having more choices. Perhaps an incentive to step forward... I heard you saying in your original post that people should just not let themselves be held back. Is that enough? Might we want to help things along?

          ***

          [Speaking of tests, if you all take the tests linked, "How Adult Are You?" and "How Infantalized Are You?", I'd like to know you scored. Word has it many teens' scores are higher than adults on the test of adultness. I think we'd have quite a discussion as your results come in...]

            After reading everyone's comments I notice that the idea of having time to make mistakers as well as the idea that as teenagers we do not have experience in this world are reccurring.

            Personally I find that there is no moment one stops making mistakes and even far into our adulthood we spend time learning to make good decisions. Perhaps some may find closure in being allowed more of a pass to make mistakes as society often expects young people to make, but I feel we as the next generation can do so much more if we are given not just by society but by ourselves, a sense of responsibilty.

            I also feel that age doesn't determine experience. It all depends on how we live our lives and use our time.

              Page: 1 2 3 4 5
              notoken!