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The Influence of Peer Groups
The life and challenges around your teen
No influence in your teenager's life is as powerful as peer pressure. At its best, it can mobilize his energy, motivate him to strive for success, and encourage him to conform to a healthy group norm. At its worst, peer pressure can impair good judgment and fuel risk-taking behavior, drawing a child away from the family and positive influences and luring him into dangerous activities. No matter what kind of peer pressure your children face, they must learn how to balance the value of going along with the crowd against the importance of making their own decisions. And you must ensure that your teen is comfortable with himself so that he will be able to achieve that balance. Peer pressure usually depends on the kind of peer group your child hangs out with-or the one she aspires to. Some teens run with the popular crowd. They may worry that not going along with their friends will make them outcasts or at least less popular. Then there are kids who are not in the popular group but would like to be. These teens are likely to go along with things in the hopes that it will buy them the acceptance and elevated social status they crave. There are other groups where one strong personality dominates and that person uses his or her influence over the others to lead the group into trouble. And there are kids who are not popular per se but have their own cliques. They are usually known by stereotypical labels: punks, geeks, deadheads, burnouts, and so on. Kids who are a part of these groups do not worry about what the mainstream kids think, but they worry intensely what members of their own group do. While they may think (or look like) they are bucking trends, they may be succumbing to a different set of pressures. | The peer groups are important during teen years for many different reasons. | | Firstly, young people are moving out from the family and yet still experience great uncertainty about what they believe and where they stand. They need new values and attitudes, so they look to the peer group to provide alternatives to those of their family. | | Secondly, young people spend a lot of time in groups - either in school, or in sport or other leisure activities - so group values and behaviour can be very influential. | | Thirdly, in the process of becoming adults, teenagers are experimenting with sexual behaviour, drug and alcohol use, and so on. When anyone takes up something new they tend to look to their peers for guidance. |
Groups of interest and individuals
Even little kids worry about making friends and being liked. But during adolescence, these fears intensify. Adolescence brings with it so much awkwardness and uncertainty, as teens find their bodies, interests, and priorities all changing at once.
Belonging to a group of friends affirms their self-worth and supports them as they negotiate the rocky path toward adulthood. As they distance themselves from their parents, they increasingly use their friends as their primary confidants and rely upon their advice and support. Naturally, close friends are well suited to this role because those are the people most likely to rubber-stamp the individual's feelings and patiently listen to his or her ruminations on life.
In a normal situation, a close group of friends offers a sounding board as well as camaraderie and solace. But in a bad situation, teens adhere to their friends' bad or ignorant advice and opinions instead of thinking for themselves or seeking a more informed opinion.
Some teenagers fail to realize when they have become excessively dependent on their friends in a way that robs them of their independence and individuality. In these cases their friends have become a crutch - a way for teens to avoid making their own decisions and developing their own personality and tastes.
The Effects
It's not surprising that peer pressure has such an impact on your teenager's clothes, language, attitudes, and behavior. Even reasonably independent teens are not immune to the culture of conformity. Whether you like it or not, the opinions of your teenager's peers often carry more weight than yours.
Parents may worry about their children's susceptibility to adverse influences, but most teenagers seem to have a sense of when things have gone too far and when they should make their own decision rather than just going along with the crowd. And usually the influence of the peer group gradually subsides as young people mature.
Have you, as a parent of a teen, ever been struck by the change in your child's behavior when his friends are around. It's as if he has a special personality reserved for his peer group. Since being cool earns them status, teens devote a lot of their energy to this pursuit.
What's considered cool and what's uncool varies widely from year to year and from school to school. Cool behavior can range from dressing in trendy styles to being good at a certain sport to being sarcastic to parents; uncool behavior often includes displaying excessive affection and obedience toward parents, reaching out to an unpopular classmate, and expressing interest in schoolwork.
While not all teenagers follow the cool/uncool code of their social set, they're certainly aware of it. Many feel they have to act a certain way because it's expected of them. That explains why they put on a show for their friends, going out of their way to do things that would never be tolerated in their own homes. It's all to gain acceptance from their peer group.
It usually takes some convincing to get your teenager to understand that peer pressure can be dangerous. If you talk to him openly, observe his behavior carefully, and listen to him nonjudgmentally, you'll begin to understand the pressure he's under. For Parents To Consider
Most of you know very well how susceptible your teenager is to outside influences. You worry a lot about it, and with good reason. There are so many ways for today's youth to get into trouble. Alcohol and drugs are readily available, the pressure to be sexually active is strong, pornography and hate group propaganda are available on the Internet, firearms can be bought by almost anyone, and having fun sometimes lurches consciously or unconsciously into hurting other people. This gives parents a lot to worry about.
You desperately want your children to use restraint and good judgment when they're tempted to do inappropriate or illegal things, but this can be very difficult for a teenager craving acceptance.
Therefore you have to take an active role in helping your teen develop a tough skin toward peer pressure. You can't supervise them every hour of the day, so you have to prepare them for making decisions on their own. If you've discussed the risks with them, instilled in them a sense of pride, and raised them with a solid set of values, they'll be more likely to withstand the pressures they'll face and more likely to choose friends who are positive influences. They might even be better off for the experience of resisting challenges.
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