Teen issues perform potential

Teen tips perform potential

Teen Issues>>Teen Motivation

 

 

 

 

Ten Points Which Indicate Why A Teenager Performs Below Their Potential

Here are ten points which indicate why a teenager performs below their potential:

1. Teenagers make limited and narrow demands on their intelligence. They prefer not to stretch their brains too much. Any question which does not present an immediate answer is passed over. It's far easier to respond with " I don't know" than to give a considered well thought out response.

2. The teenager has low expectations. They really do not expect to achieve very much. They've decided they can only jump so high, and they are happy with that. Contentedness is great, but too many are reaching early adulthood and wished they had been inspired to raiseTeenagers Issues their expectations.

3. Peer Group Pressure is unfortunately pressuring in the wrong direction. The friends they hang out with have little or no ambitions or goals. Those friends who are studious, might have a slightly different lifestyle, and tend to want to spend time with other academics, with books, and are happy with their own company.

Excessive emphasis on entertainment, drinking, money, sex, drugs and petty crime seem attractive to too many teenagers. The golden boy or girl at home or church or other religious organization can be a tear away with friends, and the parents do not even know about it.

They are looking at you like butter would not melt in their mouth, but you have not heard their language or risqué conversation when you are not around.

4. Teenagers have no idea about their capabilities. They just do not realize that it is possible to train the brain, to take in more, remember more, analyze and form conclusions. With a look at learning strategies, tremendous strides can be made.

5. Teenagers muffle their talents because they cannot be bothered to nurture it. Laziness is an issue. The word lazy is an insult, but how can you describe the unwillingness to shift.

6. Guidance is ignored. Somehow teens
think they know best. If they have no desire in the first place, a change can happen, but only if they are prepared to follow guidance given by those who do know. It is a sad fact however that encouragement and help sometimes comes too late.

7. Fear and worry can prevent concentration and clear thinking. Worries about problems with parents, relationship with friends, bullying. Some students desperately desire to do well because of the high expectation of adults around them. This in itself sometimes produces anxiety in the teenager and can be counter-productive. There needs to be a balance.

8. The teenager does not care. Disinterest and Apathy are key here. But why is that? Is it ignorance of the consequences of lack of achievement? Or is that the people around them also do not care, or are not encouraging them. It could be that the teen is in a comfort zone - thinking they are doing enough. Some are - but many are not.

9.
The teenager has an attitude problem with respect to authority. They are rude and disrespectful to teachers and parents or to any adult who tries to tell them what to do. This can sometimes be a camouflage for the confusion that exists about requirements for different subjects.

The teenager is not able to decipher and analyze the necessary and unique requirements for each examination. They are as good as gold in some environments, and flip in others.

10. The environment which some teenagers find themselves in is not conducive to learning. There are little or no books in the home or club. They are unaware of the benefits of visiting and belonging to a public library. MTV is far more attractive than News Channels or factual program. TV and computer games are the be all and end all of leisure at home.

The internet means chat rooms and furtive searches for porn, rather than a positive search for knowledge. Conversations at home are a mixture of grunts, snarls and shouting matches interspersed with pre-occupied silences.

School is a battlefield and effectively a youth club, where more often than not, they leave at the end of the day, having learnt nothing new. However, they do know which kid is doing what to whom.

 

 

 

 

 

Teen Motivation:

7 Quick and Easy Teen Weight Loss Tips

Why Do Teens Want To Be Fashionable?

 

Confidence and Self-Esteem Vital to All

 

Avoiding the Fatal Pitfall of Personal Change

Motivation for Teens

Motivation Today

Teen Encouraged to Use Creativity and Reach Out to Peers

Parenting Your Teenagers, The Teenager and the Gorilla

See One, Do One, Teach One

Talking So Your Teen Will Listen

Tips for Moms on Teens Anger Management

7 Tips To Help Your Daughter Build Confidence

What Teens Want

Are You A Responsible Teenage Parenting

 

|About Us | Disclaimer | Privacy Policy | Site Map | Site Map Tips | Site Map Teen Motivation |  Site Map Parenting Teens |
| Site Map Teen Horoscopes | Site Map Teen Music | Site Map The Issues|  Site Map Teen Education |Blog|Links|