Threats Of Adolescence

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What are the threats that confront the wellbeing of adolescents? How can these threats be addressed by the family and other support systems available for the adolescent? Give suitable examples from your cultural context.

Psychologically, adolescence is the age when individual becomes integrated into the society of adults, the age when the child no longer feels that he is below the level of his elders but equal, at least in rights. The integration into adult society has many affective aspects, more or less linked with puberty.
Early adolescence is usually referred to as the “teens” sometimes even the “terrible teens.” Although older adolescents are, strictly speaking, “teenagers” until they reach twenty years of age, the label teenager has become popularly associated with the characteristics pattern of behaviour of young adolescents, is rarely appliedd to older adolescents. Instead they are usually referred to “young men” and “young women” - or even “youths”- indicating that society recognises a maturity of behaviour not found during the early years of adolescence.
While all periods in the life span are important, some are more important than others because of their immediate effects on attitudes and behaviour, whereas others are significant because of their long term effects. Adolescence is one of the periods when both the immediate effects and long term effects are important. Some periods are important for their physical and some are for their psychological effects adolescence id important for both. Also there can be possible threats that can risk the well being of adolescents:
• Peer Pressure: Peers influence the adolescent’s personality pattern in two ways: firstly, the self concepts of adolescents are reflections of ...

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...ts, the parent- adolescent relationship generally becomes more relaxed, and the home a pleasanter place in which to live.
Talking about the relationships with siblings, grandparents, and other relatives. During early adolescence, these relationships with siblings, grandparents, and other relatives are also frictional. Older adolescents now accept their siblings, when they frequently consider nuisance when they were younger, in a calmer and more philosophical manner.
Because few adults separate early adolescence from late adolescence in their minds, they tend to remember all adolescence in their minds, they tend to remember all adolescence as a generally unhappy age. In addition, publicity given to adolescent suicides in recent years, especially among college students, has tended to strengthen the belief that this is an unhappy period in the life span.

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