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Help Your Teen Make Sound DecisionsYour teenager and her friends are leaving the high school basketball game when some classmates who have been drinking offer them a ride. Would your daughter accept the ride? According to Mary Huser, prevention specialist with the University of Wisconsin-Extension, understanding the way teens sometimes think when they make decisions can give parents some insight into how their children behave.
"Teens often visualize either-or choices," Huser says. "For a teen, thinking of all the possible choices, especially in a difficult situation, can be quite challenging." For example, a teen might think: "Either I drink beer with my friends or I look like a loser," or "If I don't have sex with my boyfriend, he'll break up with me." There are other options, but your teen's concern about how friends and peers will react makes the decision difficult. Keep in mind that, at this stage of their lives, teenagers tend to focus on the present rather than thinking of the possible long-term consequences of their actions. Huser offers these tips to help parents.
"Let teens practice making decisions about easy things first," says Huser; for example, what color to paint their bedroom, after-school activities to participate in or how to wear their hair. Also important for parents is knowing what not to do. For example:
For more information on parenting teenagers, contact your local UW-Extension office or visit the Extension Learning Store website at http://learningstore.uwex.edu/Parenting-Teenagers-C76.aspx
Contact: Mary Huser,
608-265-3589, mary.huser@ces.uwex.edu
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