High-School
Fears
Am I good
enough to make the team this year? Am
I smart enough to take AP Biology?
Those seniors seem so much older than
me! Each year of high school brings
new concerns for your teen. Follow our
suggestions on how to help ease those
worries.
Where Do I
Fit In?
Your teen is
most worried about belonging --
finding a group of like-minded peers
who will accept him and call him their
friend. These safe havens come in many
forms: sports teams, clubs,
extracurricular activities, and
friendship circles.
As you might
recall from your own high-school days,
every student body is fractured into
distinct cliques -- jocks, geeks,
nerds, goths, preps -- and while the
labels may change with the times, the
pressure to fit in seems eternal.
Encourage your child to follow
extracurricular activities based on
his own interests, curiosities, and
abilities, not on whether a certain
pursuit will grant him automatic
acceptance to a clique.
How Do I
Look?
What kids
wear and how they look is very
important in high school, and even in
middle school. Certain fashions and
brand-name clothing become the
uniforms for particular groups.
Hairstyles (and colors), makeup, body
piercings, and tattoos also give kids
both an individual and group identity.
There's
considerable pressure on girls to
emphasize their sexuality in the way
they present themselves and
communicate. For boys, achieving
average height and a sufficiently
developed physique by the mid-teens is
often equated with their masculinity.
Particularly
for mothers and daughters, sarcastic
or critical remarks about a girl's
appearance is shaming, harmful, and
puts an unnecessary strain on a
relationship that may be stressed
already. If it's tempting to comment
on your daughter's outfit or
hairstyle, try pulling back -- and
pulling out some of your own
high-school pictures instead. Besides
giving you both a good laugh, you can
use these photos to start a discussion
on how you both coped with anxieties
about your appearance. Pictures can be
a vivid reminder that Mom also
struggled with these same issues.
Am I Smart
Enough?
A nervous
freshman once told me, "Everything
starts to count freshman year. From
here on in, if you goof up at all, no
colleges will want you." This abiding
panic can continue until the end of
junior year, when kids believe their
futures will have been decided. For
many, college acceptances dictate
whether they have any future at all.
Academic
competition heats up in high school;
coursework gets measurably tougher,
homework gets much longer, teachers
don't spoon-feed kids. The challenge
is "Are you smart enough to handle all
this, on your own?"
Remind your
teen that college acceptances are
based on many factors. Kids who
challenge themselves with difficult
courses and do well are considered
better candidates than students who
receive higher grades but take the
easiest classes. Freshmen grades are
not considered as relevant as grades
in later years.
Assure him
that his study and test-taking skills
will improve. Encourage him to come to
you if he begins to become confused or
overwhelmed about any of his
schoolwork.
Keep up with
the specifics of his coursework and
homework. Don't wait for his first
term's grades to find out how he's
doing academically. Tell him that you
will do whatever it takes to help him
succeed, including finding him a tutor
if necessary.
What If
They Ask Me To?
No doubt,
your child has heard stories about
kids' smoking, taking drugs, and
drinking at school. Maybe she's even
caught a glimpse of these activities.
What should she do if she sees kids
smoking or taking drugs in the
bathroom or on school grounds? What if
they ask her to join them? These are
pressure-packed questions, especially
when kids don't want to be rejected by
anyone or any group.
Your teen
might not voice concerns about being
pressured by peers to smoke, drink,
take drugs, and have sex. It might be
up to you to initiate these
discussions. You could say, "I've
heard stories about kids smoking in
the school bathroom. Is that all they
do in there?"
Whatever your
child's response to questions like
these, it's an opening to discuss your
rules and limits about these
behaviors. Your discussion must
include the rationale behind your
rules. This isn't the time to merely
recite that old slogan, "Just say no."
While your teen is developing her own
beliefs and values regarding these
behaviors, it's vital that you provide
her with yours.
How Do I
Stop the Teasing?
Freshmen
frequently have nightmares about being
shoved in their lockers or
intentionally jostled in the corridors
by upperclassmen. Kids who've been
rejected by the strongest cliques fear
the sting of endless taunts and slurs.
If your child
has been a former target of bullies or
teasing, he may be seen as easy prey
in high school. A withdrawal from the
social and extracurricular world of
school, or a generally dejected
attitude, may be signs that he is
being bullied or harassed.
Make sure
that you know the high school's policy
regarding bullying. Federal and state
laws demand that schools create
written school policies and practice
good-faith efforts to provide all
students with an environment free from
any harassment.