Ideas about youth are _____________________________ in different place and cultures.

The difference between the youth culture of the United States during the 1950’s and present day is that the youth will always clash ideas with their parents, but the subject to which they disagree will always be changing throughout time. The youth culture of the United States has changed in many ways as to what type of things that parents and children have different viewpoints about. Currently, both cultures do disagree on things from their parents, which is a similarity. For example, the youth culture of 1950 came around with rock’n’roll music, which was noise pollution to their parents, but harmony to the youth. The youth, for one of the first times, showed a great separation gap between parents and children. This essay will undertake…show more content…
Whether it be regarding public security or for electronic cigarettes to help smokers quit, many parents and children are in a diving stage because of the change it brings upon people. Now some of the things brought upon this change can be bad such as the missuse of the electronic cigaretts by teeneagers thinking it is a “safe route to smoking” when really the device is made to help people quit, not start. Change in general of the technology has worried the parents but has been embraced by the children. Something 's now have trackers in them where parents feel the government is tracking them but really it could possibly later in the future save someone or a school from a mass shooting by tracing that suspicious person. It can be interpreted each way and the die may roll however it wants, but in the end, there is more benefit to the youth culture of the 2000’s than there is danger to the parents of their…show more content…
In the fact of many topics that change may only change in the facade in which they are resented. One topic that shows the same shadowed light upon both the youth culture and the adult culture is the habbit is of smoking. The youth culture has innovated the smoking into a “cleaner” way in which there is no pungent smell of a traditional tobacco cigarette. Now places like Briarwood Christian High School “boys’ bathrooms smell like blueberries” (Time 1). Also, “[this puts an] Emphasis on the electronic here–Molly Lattner, a 17-year-old senior at Briarwood, says she’s never seen a person her age smoking a regular tobacco cigarette” (Time 2). But, the youth culture is not the only one quality of this, as smoking tobacco started just around the grandparents age of these children, which lead their parents to think that smoking was okay as back in their time, which in fact, smoking was probably generally accepted and always even shared upon and look up upon in the household. When the grandparents were smoking, it was a social norm and no one really knew or cared about the bad things that it could do to

Youth in the United States represent many different backgrounds, cultures, and lifestyles. The issues faced by these youth are also diverse. PYD can assist and benefit the youth service providers and public health programming by identifying diverse circumstances to better understand the needs of youth. Examples of these issues include the following:

Different Types of Transitions During Adolescence:

  • Youth transitions can include: transitioning from elementary or middle to high school environments, student to employee, foster youth to adult of legal age, resident of juvenile justice facility to reintegrated youth/adult, stable family routine to disrupted living arrangements, and dependence on guardian income to taking on more financial responsibility.1

Specific Population Challenges:

  • Issues that LGBTQ+ youth are more likely to experience than heterosexual youth, such as stigma, discrimination, family disapproval, and violence, can place them at a higher risk for behavioral health challenges and complications (e.g., suicidal ideation and substance use).
  • Youth with disabilities may face additional challenges while attending school and gaining employment. You can learn more about youth with disabilities here.
  • Immigrant and refugee youth are more likely to experience stress due to societal exclusion, poverty, trauma, and separation from family.2
  • Exposure to violence and trauma while experiencing a transition can have a cumulative effect on increasing physical and mental health risks for youth.3

PYD enhances the sense of belonging, creating, and strengthening relationships with peers, friends, and identification of one's culture within a community. Increased resiliency and risk reduction can be fostered by utilizing PYD principles and practices with youth and communities of different ethnicities, races, cultures, specific needs with respect to behavior and learning, and sexual orientation. Examples of positive youth development principles in research and programming for multicultural youth include:

  • Within cultures of the United States, Native American youth with a high sense of cultural identity and self-esteem displayed lower levels of alcohol and drug use.4
  • The use of traditional American Indian/Alaska Native values through activities, such as storytelling, have shown success in decreasing substance abuse among these youth.5
  • Vietnamese-American youth exhibited a greater connection to their culture and community when they participated in a youth development program that enhanced their interpersonal skills and self-confidence.6
  • An intervention primarily targeting youth of color (specifically African American, Asian, and Latino) found that youth engagement in safe sexual practices increased after two months of receiving preventative messages via Facebook.7
  • Similarly, an intervention for African-American adolescent girls at high risk for sexually transmitted diseases included information about ethnic and gender pride, HIV knowledge, communication, condom use skills, and healthy relationships. The girls who received 16 hours of training were more consistent in their use of safe sex practices at the 6- and 12-month assessments.8

From an international perspective, similar studies confirm the effectiveness of PYD practices.

  • Youth in Panama, Costa Rica, and Guatemala who had PYD experiences, such as relationships with peers, teachers, and their families, were better able to make decisions regarding drugs and substance abuse than those with fewer positive experiences and relationships.9
  • When agencies and youth development professionals in Hong Kong provided high-risk youth life-skill training aimed at personal competency, belonging, and optimism, the youth reported having positive behavior changes. These changes included controlling anger, resolving conflict, learning more effective communication with adults, solving problems, and developing stronger value for teamwork. The key was that youth were encouraged to make contributions to their communities through service-learning activities, and parents and teachers were empowered to serve in supportive roles.10
  • Children with cerebral palsy in Bangladesh were able to improve their adaptive skills when their caregivers received a parent training program. The adaptive skills were measured in communication, socialization, motor skills, and daily living.11

Positive experiences, positive relationships, and positive environments—regardless of culture or ethnicity—can contribute to PYD.

Resources

Improving Education and Employment for Disadvantaged Young Men: Proven and Promising Strategies
This report reviews programs and policies’ evidence base on topics such as youth development, programs developed to improve educational attainment and employment for in-school youth, and programs that try to reconnect youth that are out of school and often unemployed.

Growing Up in a New Country: A Positive Youth Development Toolkit for Working with Refugees and Immigrants
This toolkit supports service providers in their efforts to develop quality programming that is culturally competent and effective for the refugee and immigrant youth in their communities.

A Native Pathway to Adulthood: Training for Tribal and Non-Tribal Child Welfare Workers
This competency-based curriculum enhances the skills of tribal and state workers in facilitating the transition of older Native American youth from out-of-home care to adulthood. The curriculum also encourages collaboration between tribes and public agencies to ensure that culturally relevant transition services are provided. The manual introduces the unique life path of tribal youth, provides information to enhance current intervention skills, and adds to the knowledge base of accessible local and national resources.

Positive Youth Justice: Framing Justice Interventions Using the Concepts of Positive Youth Development
This report can help develop a data-driven system and can act as a guide to answering such questions as: How many youth are homeless? Which housing or service interventions are most effective at ending homelessness for youth of diverse needs and contexts? Are we reducing the number of homeless youth and the length of time they are homeless?

A Training Curriculum for Youth Trainers: Strategies for Supporting Transition Aged Youth (PDF, 167 pages)
This training curriculum from the Y.O.U.T.H. (Youth Offering Unique Tangible Help) Training Project was developed for training child welfare workers and empowering foster youth. Former foster youth developed the curriculum, which includes training for specific competencies; samples of training-day curricula; training activities; and tips, resources, and surveys for foster and LGBTQ youth.

References

1 World Development Report, 2007; Yudin, 2013; Walters, et al. 2011
2 Rhodes, 2005
3 Boynton-Jarrett, Hair, & Zuckerman, 2013
4 Zimmerman & Arunkumar, 19947
5 Moran & Reaman, 2002; NREPP, 2007
6 McConachie, Huq, Munir, Ferdous, Zaman, & Khan, 2000
7 Kegler, Young, Marshall, Bu, & Rodine, 2005
8 Bull, Levine, Black, Schmiege, & Santelli, 2012
9 DiClemente et al., 2004
10 Kliewer & Murrelle, 2007
11 Wong & Lee, 2005

What is youth culture called?

Youth Culture, Sociology of Youth culture refers to the cultural practice of members of this age group by which they express their identities and demonstrate their sense of belonging to a particular group of young people.

What is youth culture describe?

Let's Define Youth Culture. According to Rice, Youth culture is "the sum of the ways of living of adolescents; it refers to the body of norms, values and practices recognized and shared by members of the adolescent society as appropriate guides to actions.

What is the difference between culture and youth culture?

Despite the appearance of stability, culture is a dynamic, historical process. Youth culture refers to those processes and symbolic systems that young people share that are, to some degree, distinctive from those of their parents and the other adults in their community.

What is youth culture influenced by?

Youth cultures are profoundly influenced by media and globalization. by distinctive ways of dressing, using language, music preferences, engaging in sports and interests, typical behavior and life style. This collective expression of the social experiences of the youth characterizes it as having a culture of its own.

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