Sunday, 22 April 2012

Debate Part 2

Jaime: I feel that adults should learn from teenagers as adults can be too traditional and are not up to date with the latest technology which hinders them from a variety of communicative platforms and being tech savvy is definitely an advantage.

Joella:  Are you saying that being traditional is wrong? Are you implying that remembering our culture is wrong too? I personally believe that we should remember our traditional beliefs and continue to pass them down to all the future generations. Our ancestors have worked so hard to continue passing down the beliefs, are you just going to let their efforts go to waste? Parents may nag us to follow the same traditions, but we do have to take into consideration their feelings about them and not ignore their words, after all, they do care for our safety and would rather ask us follow the long routines.Therefore, adults need not learn about the ‘newer’ norms and abandon traditions.

Li-Shann: Yes. The traditions are really important and needs to be preserved for the future generations. But don’t you think that it is also important for the adults to keep themselves updated with the newest technology and softwares to carry out their jobs in a more efficient manner? For example, right now, we’re discussing this on google docs before posting this debate on the blog. Google docs allows us to communicate and type things in a document simultaneously. My mom, who’s a teacher also uses google docs to communicate with her students or share documents. So you see, sometimes it’s better to at least know about these softwares.



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Anna: True that your mother is able to make good use of technology; however, what if traditional methods aren’t actually bad at all? Take for example, making wine. Using traditional methods to make wine is better than modern methods, as traditional methods make the wine sweeter. It also makes the wine more natural than normal. Thus, adults do not need to necessarily be faulted in an area they may not have a forte in, but rather be looked up to as role models with their efficient and traditional methods as well.

Li-Shann: I'm not saying that traditional methods are bad. I'm just saying that maybe adults could learn about our latest technology from teenagers, the same way we can learn traditional methods from them.

Joella: Basically, I am also talking about societal norms. For example, most adults now and in the past usually wish their friends ‘Happy Birthday’ in person or by calling them up. However, most teenagers these days are simply wishing their friends on Facebook, which is a social networking website. Another example would be chatting with friends. Do you often see adults talking on social networking websites with their friends? I doubt it, and even if it does happen, it’s still rare. Teenagers are speaking more to their friends online, and they are more open, usually saying things that they won’t say in person. I do feel that this may cause a negative impact on their lives. What if one day people start feeling awkward to talk to one another in person? Which is why I’m saying that adults need not change their ways and learn about the newest technology.

Jaime: I think you have a good point there, and adults can still stick to their traditional methods to carry out different tasks in daily lives. Both teenagers and adults can learn from each other actually, whether technology is involved or not. 


Li-Shann: I TOTALLY AGREE WITH YOU JOELLA. 




But instead of only focusing on the bad points of technology and how we use it. Why not think about the positive aspects of it. Like how social networking sites like facebook help us connect with old friends and people that we may not be able to talk to on a daily basis. You say adults are rarely seen chatting online. But i think the reason why is cuz they DON'T KNOW HOW TO. That time i posted a status and my dad commented " Hi Shann." I said hi back and 10 minutes later he called me and said " Eh. Now i cannot type anymore."


So you see, sometimes it's not because they don't want to. But they can't. And also facebook can help us communicate with one another for free. Texting is not. 

Joella: Yes, and here is another example to further substantiate my point. Sometimes when we try to explain something, it is also better to do it in person, where we can use hand gestures or demonstrate how something is to be carried out. Sure, we can always start talking to our friends with a  few clicks, and now we can even do it anywhere if we have smartphones. However, don't you find that talking to friends in person would be rarer? Shouldn't we treasure the time we have with our friends?

Take me for example, whenever my friend asks me to explain a mathematics problem to her, I do find it difficult as there are limited symbols on the computer to type our equations and sometimes i can't really explain the whole method just by typing it down, but by explaining it carefully in detail by drawing and doing it in person, it helps so much more, as my friend would know how i achieved the method and know how to exactly apply it in the maths problem.

Anna and Joella: In conclusion, we do feel that adults need not learn so much about technology and be as tech savvy as teenagers. Some adults have lived without the help of technology for a period of time in the past, and some are even unable to afford buying computers. Does this mean that they would die because they cannot make use of technology? Does technology keep us alive like how oxygen does? The correct answer would be no. Technology is indeed useful in many ways, but we shouldn't force adults into thinking that technology is everything in the world, and everything that they would need. There are many more examples but of course we would not need to further go into detail. Traditional methods may really prove to be more efficient than technology in many ways.

Jaime and Li-Shann: Thank you for your stand and ideas towards this discussion. However in our conclusion, our stand is that we feel that adults should learn from teenagers in terms of technology and how we use in our daily lives. Technology is something that most adults may not be very familiar with, as compared to teenagers. Adding to that, adults can also learn from our positive and lively attitude.

Wednesday, 18 April 2012

Debate Part 1

Anna: I believe that teenagers should learn from adults because adults are more experienced and are thus more mature in ways of thought. 

Li-Shann: I agree. But there are also things that adults can learn from teenagers. For example, their lively attitude.

Joella: How can you be sure of this? In the present times, more teenagers are actually feeling more stressed due to the increasing standard and emphasis on education in Singapore, and tend to have negative attitudes when it comes to studying and having to go to school.

Li-Shann: EXACTLY. Despite all the stress and increasing standards of expectations, teenagers can still have a cheerful and lively mood to do things. Hence, adults can learn from their enthusiastic spirit and motivate themselves to do the same too. (:



 this blog is epic

Jaime: Yes, i agree with Li-Shann. Although students may have a negative viewpoint of school, it all goes down to their mindsets and perspective of things.

Joella: I am not only talking about the aspects of education. I do know that they may be able to cope with some of this stress, but this type of stress is usually long-term, students don’t just have to cope with stress only in secondary school you know? This would in turn result in an overall decreased happiness level, which might not make them as lively as before or even cause them to feel pessimistic. Therefore, in what ways can learning from teenagers’ enthusiastic spirit motivate adults to do the same too? Do you think that adults are actually able to apply the positive values of teenagers, which you had said earlier about having an enthusiastic spirit, into their work lives? I beg to differ.

Anna: Also, why should adults learn from teenagers? Most adults themselves are already independent and matured, they know what is best for them and what they should look up to as role models for themselves.

Jaime: Even though adults are matured, there is definitely still much more for them to learn from. They may have achieved an outstanding degree in their education, or even succeeding in their careers, but what about their mentality?

Li-Shann: By learning from teenagers, adults may be able to find flaws in their attitudes. For example, they can learn from the curiosity and the willingness to find out more from  teenagers hence allowing them to discover the other positive aspects of life. They may also be able to solve conflicts more efficiently.

Anna: But then again, how can you confirm that adults will benefit as such from this? What if adults will not be able to actually identify their flaws and weaknesses, and rather end up feeling demoralised and always finding fault in themselves? Learning from teenagers may be a bad thing instead.

Li-Shann: That’s the thing. They can’t find fault in themselves. As mentioned in my stand, adults don’t like criticism. Be it constructive or not. My father is an example :b But to tell the truth, who likes being criticised? NOBODY. It’s just that i feel like adults are more likely to feel offended and not try to change their faults as they have the mentality that they are always right. By saying learning from teenagers, i mean like learning about the positive stuff. And when teenagers try to correct adults or tell them something about what they’re doing, MOST adults feel like the teenagers are rude and tell them off instead of just trying to accept and reflect on the comment.

Joella: Are you sure that all adults feel the same way? How can you assume that adults do not like being criticised? Criticism isn’t only about the negative aspects of something, it can also mean pointing out the positive or advantageous aspects. Most people have this misconception that criticism only means ‘finding faults’, however, really, criticising basically means ‘passing judgment over’ or ‘examining’ and may mean 'finding the merits'. Why wouldn’t adults want to have positive feedback? Since you said that adults do not like being criticized by teenagers and may not want to change the way that they do certain things, then what's the point of learning from teenagers in this case? This may mean that adults need not learn from teenagers, because they know who to learn from.

Monday, 16 April 2012

INTERVIEW - SHANTHINI'S POINT OF VIEW



In the interview with Shanthini, she agreed that teenagers should learn from adults and that with adults being role models for teenagers, the society would benefit. Her main reasons were that adults were more experienced and that teenagers could also learn from adults' mistakes to improve themselves.

Jaime- Why should adults learn from teenagers?

Many parents and children nowadays have a habit of quarreling over small matters, such as: children not tidying up their bedroom, or not coming home by the given curfews. However, both the adults and teenagers are going through different things in life. The adults are  working and the children are studying and they have different ways of overcoming daily challenges.Therefore, we feel that there ARE things that adults CAN learn from children.

Technology is becoming more and more advanced as time passes. And like those in the interviews said, “They can learn how to make use of technology in everyday life.” Of course, nowadays most adults CAN and DO use computers and the internet for work. But for those who don’t, teenagers would be able  to aid their parents or family members in learning the functions of their mobile phones or computers.

Adults should also learn from teenagers as they have different lifestyles and everyday mindset. Adults may dread going to work everyday, however, teenagers being students may think that going to school to receive new knowledge and to make new friends is exhilarating. So, adults can learn from teenagers that having a cheerful mindset and the appropriate enthusiasm and energy level may help them distress and make their days brighter.

Adding on, there was a 12 year-old girl, Severn Suzuki, who spoke at the UN Earth Summit 1992. During her speech, she mentioned that she, “as a child” knows about poverty, global warming and pollution. Severn Suzuki boldly criticized adults for being ignorant and selfish. Some of the adults may not know much about the environment and global warming and even when they possess the knowledge, they may not proceed with action, which is to do their part for the environment. While we will continue to learn from adults, if adults are open to new perspectives, there is a lot adults can learn from us too.

Thursday, 12 April 2012

Annabelle and Joella - Why teenagers should learn from adults


OUR STAND :)


Firstly, we believe that teenagers should learn from adults because they have gone through much more hardship than teenagers in the past, and would have to overcome the countless obstacles. We also believe that experience comes with age, and having gone through past life experiences and also through the process of coping with the hardship that they faced, adults would have had a fruitful learning experience, by learning from mistakes made for example,and therefore would be able to give advice to teenagers on how to think of solutions effectively. Why do we say that adults had a tougher life in the past than teenagers nowadays? In the past, around the 1960s, there wasn’t much technology. There weren’t computers then, and researching for information or communicating required manual work. Some of the adults now have also gone through World War II, and through the experience, adults might have also learnt that they should treasure their loved ones and also their personal property and not take them for granted. We are not saying that teenagers should go through the war itself just to learn from it, we are saying that since some adults have gone through the war, they would be able to tell their stories to teenagers and let them learn from it. We certainly believe that teenagers should learn from them, as some teenagers these days do take their parents for granted and do not treasure precious time with them. 


Secondly, we believe that teenagers should learn from adults as they have much more knowledge and understand much more aspects of life in greater depth as compared to teenagers. Overtime, adults would have already learned many things from adults of their generation, whether this knowledge benefits their education or simply knowledge on how different activities should be carried out. As the current adults that they are now, they would be able to better understand certain topics or ways of doing certain things. For example, whom does a teenager look up to when learning about the knowledge and facts of this world? Obviously, if he/she wants to approach a qualified person to confirm the knowledge he would be gaining, he would approach a qualified adult, such as a teacher. This is also because a teacher is one who has learnt and knows much more. A teacher is also trained in the aspect of teaching, and most likely is able to answer any queries made. Of course, teenagers have to learn from teachers in school, but sometimes, do they really take in the information and apply them? Do they look at the positive aspects of teachers and learn good values from them? We beg to differ, though some teenagers do.The only logical way of allowing a teenager to learn new things is to approach an adult. Also, sometimes teenagers can be insensitive about certain issues which go on in their daily lives. They easily criticize and complain about such issues, without even bothering to make the effort to truly understand why or how these issues have arisen. Some may even resort to violence if the case worsens.This is when adults play a big role. They can make a difference in the way teenagers think and feel about certain issues by allowing them to look at different perspectives, as they can explain and allow us to change the way some of us teenagers react to certain issues and teach us to be less impulsive. This is because they are able to fully comprehend and be able to understand why things happen in a certain manner as they have more matured mindsets. Thus, this concludes the fact that teenagers should learn from adults because adults are basically more knowledgeable and are able to comprehend issues which constantly occur in this world more deeply than how teenagers do. 


We believe that teenagers should learn from adults. Definitely, we are agreeing with teenagers learning from the positive aspects of adults. One would certainly not want to see the negatives of a teenager’s attitude or any other aspect arise from the learning from adults. Thus, we are referring to teenagers learning from both the positive and appropriate moral values, adults’ way of thinking and of their traditional methods of doing things. We are also referring to mentally matured adults, those of the Generation X, who are probably born between the early 1960s through the early 1980s. Adults could also refer to teachers and parents, who mostly display positive values to be good role models to the children. We are not saying that all teenagers are bad and have all the unwanted and negative mindsets, we are referring to teenagers in general. We are also not entirely saying that all adults are good and possess all the right attitudes, behaviours, and uphold all the right moral values. We all know that no one is perfect in this world. Humans make mistakes, and this is a normal phase in life. Therefore, we strongly support the fact that teenagers should learn from adults, positively.


-Annabelle and Joella (:


Tuesday, 10 April 2012

INTERVIEW - SHOULD ADULTS LEARN FROM TEENAGERS?



This video have shown the different perspectives as to how different people think feel about adults learning from teenagers.

Respondents who felt that teenagers should learn from adults have mostly said that it is due to adults' more matured way of thinking, while teenagers have yet to achieve the same level of maturity/experience. Whereas on another side, others have offered ways in which adults can learn from teenagers, such as in terms of technology and use of modern technological inventions like social networking.

Some have even mentioned the 21st century skills in teenagers which adults can learn from, and even some feel that everyone can learn from everybody and teenager or not, it doesn't matter. Maybe teenagers have a wider range of imagination, creativity and better ways of thinking? Some have said so, criticizing the restricted ways of thought in an adult. Therefore, as you can see from this video itself, everyone has different opinions on adults learning from teenagers.

LI-SHANN - ADULTS LEARNING FROM TEENAGERS :)


BRACE YOURSELF FOR A SUPER LONG POST. I'm already typing like crazy.


So before i begin, i just want to say that i am not referring to those teenagers who are in depression or are super distressed over their everyday lives. Because there is not much adults can learn from them, other than how they cope with stress, which in this case, is another topic. I am actually referring to those teenagers that are leading a happy life. SO HERE GOES : 


First of all, by saying that adults should learn from teenagers,  we’re not saying that we shouldn’t learn from adults because WE SHOULD! But as we continue to learn from them, adults should also be open to new perspectives, as there is a lot they can learn from us too. 


Teenagers don’t hide what we feel. Unlike adults, we don’t really keep our emotions inside us. Okay. Take for instance, teenagers hug people to encourage or comfort them. I KNOW I HUG MY FRIENDS FOR MORAL SUPPORT ALL THE TIME. However, most grown-ups in our society are not huggers and that's okay, nobody wants a scary guy on the MRT hugging you. But when was the last time you saw an adult hugging her BEST FRIEND, just because? 


Next, laughter they say is the best medicine. It lights up the face and spreads warmth wherever and whomever it touches. We laugh a lot especially when we are happy. We have infectious laughter and can do the funniest things, we drive adults up the wall to the point of insanity and yet cheer them up when they’re feeling down. Adulthood makes them serious because life can be tough and if they are not serious they will lose their focus and direction. Therefore, i feel that adults should learn how to live in the moment and show their excitement. Fun is more fun when it's shared so show people how happy they make you. 


Next, don’t be judgemental. People our age do not judge a book by its cover. We do not discern between race, religion, colour or gender. Adults are quick to judge because of their own insecurities and ignorance. 


Learning to be more accepting of people in general is a good way to overcome a lot of barriers in our society today.

Also, teenagers like us, love to ask questions, in fact, we do it on a daily basis. Though our questions can sometimes be overly personal or nonsensical but we’re never afraid to ask when they don't know something. Therefore, adults could learn this from us and ask whenever they don’t know something, they shouldn't be afraid that this made "downgrade" who they are. (不耻下问 YAA KNOWW) Chances are they weren't the only one wondering anyhow.

All day long we hear from adults  "Don't do this" or "Please do that" and not only do we accept this but also seek it out. Most adults however, feel offended when someone disagrees with them or tell them not to do something. 

 this blog is hilarious

If they could take criticism and correction well, 90% of the conflicts they have among one another could’ve been avoided.




Lastly, it is to lead a worry free life. Easier said than done. Being an adult comes with a lot of responsibility. Like making ends meet, putting food on the table, paying the bills. All these factors which appear to have become a reality in the current economic climate make "a life free of worry", a concept easy to imagine, but almost impossible to put into practise. Most adults’ lives are also  ruled with the disappointments and frustrations of 'what ifs' and 'had I known'. Fear is disruptive, it causes retrogression and not progress. It eats into our confidence and stops us from pursuing what we desire. However, most teenagers do not have a care in the world. They live for the day and not worry about tomorrow. Therefore, i feel that maybe adults can try to relax and live for today with the belief that "tomorrow will take care of itself".


In conclusion, although most of the time we may  seem like little devils,  we are actually ANGELS that can teach adults a lot about how we can better their life. Yes, most of the time we do weird stuff that puts adults off, but unknowingly and without a clue WE ALSO  allow adults to explore things that they tend to forget as they grow into adulthood.

 this blog is epic

OH AND MOST OF THE STUFF HERE ARE WRITTEN BASED ON THE PERSONAL ACCOUNTS OF ADULTS THAT I’VE GOTTEN FROM THE INTERNET SO DON’T SAY THAT I’M ASSUMING BECAUSE I AM NOT :D and sorry if this post is kind of wordy. yes. i wasted your time, but at least the gifs were cute right? :b

Sunday, 1 April 2012

Newspaper Articles: Gen Y more gracious than Gen X: Survey AND More giving to charity from the grave

From The Straits Times, as quoted:



There was also a hard copy newspaper article with the same title but more detailed.




This article mainly discusses the issues about kindness related behaviour among individuals of our current society and the generation of adults and senior citizens. Many adults have misconceptions that teenagers are always not gracious and are selfish. However, it seems to be the opposite, and means that adults should instead learn from teenagers about graciousness. What teenagers of our society are doing right now can be seen as respectable behaviour and attitudes in society, and it also indicates a learning point for adults. Also, when adults themselves learn from teenagers, they also improve their own attitudes and graciousness, allowing teenagers to learn from adults too at the same time. It is a two-way process, and this article can show support for both stands of the issue being discussed.

--

From The Straits Times article in the home section, 31st of March 2012, titled 'More giving to charity from the grave". This article discusses the many adults whom have experienced or been related to World War 2, and have donated generously to the charity funds. This may allow teenagers to learn from adults, as the adults have respectable behavior by donating. Also, it enables teenagers to learn from adults when they may encounter similar situations in the future. The fact that the kind adults were willing to offer some condolence money shows the high moral values of them, which portrays a model examples for teenagers to follow.

Here is the hard copy of the newspaper article.


Survey Statistical Data: SurveyMonkey.com

http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/8L7CCVJ

We wanted to know more from the public on their views about our controversial issue, as well as attaining their own views on the topic. Altogether, there were 37 responses.

Question 1: Age?

[This question is to basically show who were our respondents and how many of them were there]

Therefore, most of our respondents are teenagers, with a few adults included as well. 

Question 2: Which category bests suits you?

[This is a personal question, as some may think differently when it comes to age and who they think they are in society]

5 feel that they are considered adults already, even though in the previous question only 4 had been 20 and above, which is the range we consider for those who are adults. Again, most of our respondents are teenagers. 

Question 3: On a scale of 1 to 10, 10 being strongly agree and 1 being strongly disagree. do you think that most teenagers learn from adults?

[From this question, we hope to see their view on our issue, and how strongly they approve/oppose to it.]


Most say the range would be from 3-8, and it shows that our respondents do not entirely approve or disapprove with the idea of teenagers learning from adults. However, there is also a small party of people who strongly disagrees with teenagers learning from adults. 

Question 4:  Do you feel that your opinions/ways of thinking are different from that of an adult/teenager?

[Based on who they think they are as stated in question 2, we hoped to find out if they felt that there is a difference between the thinking of teenagers and adults, which is a factor in the learning relationship between teenagers and adults.]


While most feel that their way of thinking is different, there is also quite a large group of people who do not know whether their ways of thinking are different. Other factors may have resulted in this, but this survey would not explore details of the factors. 

Question 5: Generally speaking, do you think that teenagers should learn from adults?

[Without a range of how they feel, we hoped to see if this question could tell us, in generic terms, what our respondents felt about teenager learning from adults.]


Similar to the results of previous questions, we can see that most of our respondents do feel that teenagers should learn from adults. Even with the given low range of 1-5 from only some 14 of them in question 3, more than half still feel that teenagers should learn from adults. 

Question 6: According to your answer for question 5, why do you think teenagers should/should not learn from adults? (e.g. adults have better traditional methods of doing things OR too traditional, having old and undeveloped ideas etc.)

[We wanted to know their SPECIFIC reasons and opinions on the issue, which may also help in disucssion on the different stands of the issue.]

This is a free-response question, and their responses included: 

1. Adults have experienced much more things than a teenager and they can give advice for teenagers to live a better life, avoid mistakes that lead to severe consequences.

2. Although adults may have more experience than us, their experiences and ours are probably different. Furthermore, I believe teenagers should have the maturity and integrity to do what is right and what adults do/ think may not always be accurate or correct.

3. Adults have developed logical thinking through life experience, thus are able to derive processes and solutions when doing things.

4. Teenagers can learn what and what not to do by observing adults. It is not just the words spoken by adults but also the actions of adults that a teenager can learn from.

5. Adults have more experience than teenagers. They may have gone through the exact situations that the teenagers are going through and have lived through the repercussions of making certain decisions.

6. Though the younger generation think that it may be 'uncool' to follow such traditions, I believe that it is important to retain one's culture. On top of this, learning from the experiences of adults is useful for us teenagers as it teaches is the right and wrong doings to some extent.

 7. I feel that we should learn from adults and adults should also learn from us. I have always wanted equality amongst both the generations. I feel that there is a limit to what we do and what adults can do and I think that we can learn a lot from both the generations of people.

8. Firstly, I think that we should learn from adults as I feel that they are more experienced than us and thus they know better than we do. However, also, sometimes, I think that adults have a much more mature way of thinking and doing stuff and it doesn't really suit teenagers like us, so I feel that in this perspective, teenagers should not learn from adults.

9. I think that adults are more experienced and would know things better than us. We should incorporate our ideas with theirs to come up with the best suitable idea,

10. Teenagers are of a different generation as compared to adults. I believe that teenagers should have both adults' way of thinking as it might be more mature / logical, and their own mind-set as they should be able to think on their own.

11. Adults are good role models especially towards their children. Teenagers should learn from adults who are wiser and more experienced.

12. Every generation has their own types of ideas and methods. We can't just take whatever older generation do and do it all over again and repeat history. We need new things, new inventions, and new mind-sets. If we're just stuck there with that dead idea that you have to do it this way because older generation say so, then we'll never move on.

13. They should learn how adults manage their time & all those. However some adults do things like gambling & smoking which I don't encourage teenagers to learn from.

14. Teenagers these days are not sentimental and do not really treasure the things that they have. They have also become much lazier than before, probably because they do not need to experience that much hardship anymore. Teenagers also squander money, and are often spoilt, always wanting their parents to buy the latest mobile devices or electronic devices and game consoles, or even fashion accessories. Adults have better self-control, because they may have lived in hardship once and met with many problems in the past. They also have more matured thoughts, and know how to treasure their things, and family members. They are also more filial to their parents, unlike the present teenagers, who take their parents for granted, some complaining that they nag too much and continuously hate on them, some even wanting their parents to vanish forever. Teenagers should know that whatever their parents are doing for them are for their own good. Teenagers also have much to learn from their parents about the past, how people lived and their lifestyles at that point of time. Most adults have many interesting stories to be told, and these stories often have much to learn from too. Teenagers complain that adults have old thinking and that they may be too traditional at times, but I don't think that this is a problem. So what if our society is becoming more modern each day? So what if you are a teenager? I think that everyone is entitled to their own opinions and thinking, and those old ideas or traditional beliefs should be conserved. We should not forget the traditions that our ancestors have left for us. Teenagers should get to learn more about why adults tend to conserve traditional beliefs and be more understanding. Teenagers have also become a lot more immature and often quarrel with friends and relatives. If our parents could maintain peace with their friends and relatives in the past and present, why can't teenagers do that too? Teenagers should learn from adults how to do work manually as well. What do I mean by that? Most teenagers these days rely too much on electronic devices to do their work, such as the laptop to search for resources, or the washing machine to wash clothes, or the microwave to cook simple food. They should instead learn from adults how to research in libraries and newspapers, where more hard work is required, how to manually wash clothes and shoes and also how to use the stove to cook their food instead. What if one day, the power supply is cut off? They are doomed. 

15. My answer had nothing to do with adults being traditional or not. I personally feel that most adults in Singapore are over the traditional methods, are practical and have common sense.

16. They are role models and they help shape our character by helping us differentiate what is right and what is wrong.

17. It depends; adults have more experience that teenagers could do well to learn from. Adults are in reality similar to teenagers in ways. They can be reckless at times, but also mature and be good role models to learn from. Teenagers are in the same way careless and have lackadaisical attitudes about several things. However, adults most of the time have more experience than teenagers and teenagers should aim to respect their elders and learn from them unless their elders prove unsuitable role models.

18. I think teenagers should discover their own way of learning and adults provide examples to follow.

19. Adults in general are considered to be more mature and hence teenagers should learn to consider the opinions of adults, as they have been through more. However, I feel that teenagers should still have their own stand as ideas and thoughts are not limited by age. Hence, I feel that adults can learn from teenagers too.


Conclusion: The results show most of them talk about experience, dependence on the situations, and maturity of adults. Also, they feel that most feel that teenagers should learn from adults, while a small number also state adults should learn from teenagers. All have their own opinions, and some even suggest equality between both groups of people. 

Question 7:  If you think that teenagers should learn from adults, in what ways (e.g. in terms of attitudes/moral values/education and academics etc.) do you think they should learn from adults? If you think that teenagers should not learn from adults, then whom do you think they should look up to as role models?

[We want to know what our respondents feel about the positive/negative things that teenagers can learn from adults and who else can be role models for the teenagers, besides adults.]

Their responses had included:  

1. Attitudes and survival skills

2. Role models can be anyone who has left an impact on the teen, someone who is righteous and inspiring.

3. Teenagers should look up to people who inspire them.

4. Teenagers should learn from adults in terms of moral values, humility, perseverance and willingness to sacrifice for others.

5. Positive attitudes and moral values. I emphasize on the positive values. Teenagers can learn from adults. For example, when teenagers see the harm caused to an adult by smoking, teens can learn NOT to follow. Alternatively, when teens see the good consequences that came about from the words and actions of an adult, teens will be able to role model these as well. Whatever the decisions that teens make based on listening to or watching adults, teens must decide what is best for them. It is not necessarily true that adults are always role models for what to do but adults also serve as role models for what NOT TO DO.

6. They should learn to persevere and work hard and manage their time wisely.

7. I think that they should learn every area possible from adults.

8. I think that teenagers should learn moral values from adults. I also think that teenagers could learn how to think more maturely like adults, unless that particular adult is unfortunately, immature.

9. Teenagers should learn from adults in terms of attitudes and values. But these values should not be forced on the teenagers, and we should have a right to believe what we want to believe.

10. It really depends on who the adult is. Perhaps attitude, but then again, depends. It really depends on your current target/goal.

11. We should learn from their mistakes like study harder etc. In truth, nobody is perfect but I think teenagers should follow the footsteps of his or her parents which are adults :) this also only applies if the parents are on the right path or not.

12. How to make the right choices. To understand right from wrong, what to do and what not to do.

13. They should just learn from each other and create new ideas. There's no point looking up to someone.

14. Themselves, adults from earlier times: Salvador Dali, Mother Teresa, free spirited people, DO NOT CONFORM TO THE WAYS OF THE ESTABLISHMENT.

15. Everything, please, who else can teenagers learn from?

16. They should look up to whomever as they want as role models. Everybody has different role models.

17. They should learn moral values, perhaps traditional beliefs, and also education manners, and attitude.

18. They should learn in terms of culture/attitudes to certain things. I feel that teenagers are sometimes unable to appreciate culture that has true substance. While something that appeals to an older audience may seem 'dull/boring' to teenagers (this is prone to happening), it can actually be informative/intellectual, as due to the experience adults have, and they can understand deeper things. At the same time, some dogmatic practices that were common in the past and in the times of our adults now should be eliminated. As an example, in the past, women had much less value in society and were treated literally like property with no emotions or free will of their own. A good thing that has surfaced today is the rise of feminism (fighting for the rights of women to be equal to that of men). A lot of care should be taken when 'learning from adults'. Teenagers should not follow blindly; they should determine themselves who they can learn from.


The responses mostly include attitudes, which we assume to be the positive ones. The type of responses also show that most think that teenagers should learn from adults, since they had only answered the first part of the question. However, there are also responses who show that some feel that teenagers should not learn from adults, but also learn to look up to their own beliefs in different people around the world. 

Question 8: If adults aren't the future role models for teenagers, then what is the best way teenagers of today should learn?
  
[We wanted to know who, besides from the guidance of adults, can our teenagers of today learn.]


Some of the other responses included: 

1. Not all adults are the future role models, but some are. So perhaps, the best way would be for teenagers to know who to seek advice from listen to them or just experience failures and learn from them.

2. Then the best way teenagers of today should learn through a holistic education system.

3. Teens can learn from many sources other than themselves: teachers, peers, old folks, books, and mass media.

4. They can look up to people (probably adults) in the society which are successful. Adopt their attitudes towards life and learn from their mistakes.

5. They can both develop their own ideas of thinking and learn from one another, but it has to be positive and right concepts for them to learn.

6. I’m sure that there will be at least one adult that we can look up to in the future. You see, in future, we will be the adults that some teenagers will be learning from. It is a matter of whether you want to "teach" them.

7. Of course, by learning from one another, i mean positively, from good friends who have good behaviour. Developing their own ideas and way of doing things might prove to be disastrous and this might change everything in the future.

8. Nothing is absolutely new I don't think it's possible for teenagers to learn solely among themselves.



Now here most think that teenagers should develop their own ideas through creativity and learn from one another, which we personally think is also a very effective way. However, there are also alternative methods of learning for teenagers, as suggested by the free-response answers.

Question 9: If adults are the future role models for teenagers, then would this benefit our future society?

[We want to find out if adults would be regarded as role models, and whether it would benefit the society positively.]


From the respondents, they mostly put their trust in adults to be the role models and eventually the teenagers would contribute positively to society and overall be beneficial for society.

This thus concludes the results of the Survey Statistical Data.

Magazine Article: National Geographic October 2011 Issue: Beautiful Brains

This article was taken from Reader's Digest.

"
By David Dobbs
Although you know your teenager takes some chances, it can be a shock to hear about them.
One fine May morning not long ago my oldest son, 17 at the time, phoned to tell me that he had just spent a couple hours at the state police barracks. Apparently he had been driving "a little fast." What, I asked, was "a little fast"? Turns out this product of my genes and loving care, the boy-man I had swaddled, coddled, cooed at, and then pushed and pulled to the brink of manhood, had been flying down the highway at 113 miles an hour.
"That's more than a little fast," I said.
He agreed. In fact, he sounded somber and contrite. He did not object when I told him he'd have to pay the fines and probably for a lawyer. He did not argue when I pointed out that if anything happens at that speed—a dog in the road, a blown tire, a sneeze—he dies. He was in fact almost irritatingly reasonable. He even proffered that the cop did the right thing in stopping him, for, as he put it, "We can't all go around doing 113."
He did, however, object to one thing. He didn't like it that one of the several citations he received was for reckless driving.
"Well," I huffed, sensing an opportunity to finally yell at him, "what would you call it?"
"It's just not accurate," he said calmly. " 'Reckless' sounds like you're not paying attention. But I was. I made a deliberate point of doing this on an empty stretch of dry interstate, in broad daylight, with good sight lines and no traffic. I mean, I wasn't just gunning the thing. I was driving.
"I guess that's what I want you to know. If it makes you feel any better, I was really focused."
Actually, it did make me feel better. That bothered me, for I didn't understand why. Now I do.
My son's high-speed adventure raised the question long asked by people who have pondered the class of humans we call teenagers: What on Earth was he doing? Parents often phrase this question more colorfully. Scientists put it more coolly. They ask, What can explain this behavior? But even that is just another way of wondering, What is wrong with these kids? Why do they act this way? The question passes judgment even as it inquires.
Through the ages, most answers have cited dark forces that uniquely affect the teen. Aristotle concluded more than 2,300 years ago that "the young are heated by Nature as drunken men by wine." A shepherd in William Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale wishes "there were no age between ten and three-and-twenty, or that youth would sleep out the rest; for there is nothing in the between but getting wenches with child, wronging the ancientry, stealing, fighting." His lament colors most modern scientific inquiries as well. G. Stanley Hall, who formalized adolescent studies with his 1904 Adolescence: Its Psychology and Its Relations to Physiology, Anthropology, Sociology, Sex, Crime, Religion and Education, believed this period of "storm and stress" replicated earlier, less civilized stages of human development. Freud saw adolescence as an expression of torturous psychosexual conflict; Erik Erikson, as the most tumultuous of life's several identity crises. Adolescence: always a problem.
Such thinking carried into the late 20th century, when researchers developed brain-imaging technology that enabled them to see the teen brain in enough detail to track both its physical development and its patterns of activity. These imaging tools offered a new way to ask the same question—What's wrong with these kids?—and revealed an answer that surprised almost everyone. Our brains, it turned out, take much longer to develop than we had thought. This revelation suggested both a simplistic, unflattering explanation for teens' maddening behavior—and a more complex, affirmative explanation as well.
The first full series of scans of the developing adolescent brain—a National Institutes of Health (NIH) project that studied over a hundred young people as they grew up during the 1990s—showed that our brains undergo a massive reorganization between our 12th and 25th years. The brain doesn't actually grow very much during this period. It has already reached 90 percent of its full size by the time a person is six, and a thickening skull accounts for most head growth afterward. But as we move through adolescence, the brain undergoes extensive remodeling, resembling a network and wiring upgrade.
For starters, the brain's axons—the long nerve fibers that neurons use to send signals to other neurons—become gradually more insulated with a fatty substance called myelin (the brain's white matter), eventually boosting the axons' transmission speed up to a hundred times. Meanwhile, dendrites, the branchlike extensions that neurons use to receive signals from nearby axons, grow twiggier, and the most heavily used synapses—the little chemical junctures across which axons and dendrites pass notes—grow richer and stronger. At the same time, synapses that see little use begin to wither. This synaptic pruning, as it is called, causes the brain's cortex—the outer layer of gray matter where we do much of our conscious and complicated thinking—to become thinner but more efficient. Taken together, these changes make the entire brain a much faster and more sophisticated organ.
This process of maturation, once thought to be largely finished by elementary school, continues throughout adolescence. Imaging work done since the 1990s shows that these physical changes move in a slow wave from the brain's rear to its front, from areas close to the brain stem that look after older and more behaviorally basic functions, such as vision, movement, and fundamental processing, to the evolutionarily newer and more complicated thinking areas up front. The corpus callosum, which connects the brain's left and right hemispheres and carries traffic essential to many advanced brain functions, steadily thickens. Stronger links also develop between the hippocampus, a sort of memory directory, and frontal areas that set goals and weigh different agendas; as a result, we get better at integrating memory and experience into our decisions. At the same time, the frontal areas develop greater speed and richer connections, allowing us to generate and weigh far more variables and agendas than before.
When this development proceeds normally, we get better at balancing impulse, desire, goals, self-interest, rules, ethics, and even altruism, generating behavior that is more complex and, sometimes at least, more sensible. But at times, and especially at first, the brain does this work clumsily. It's hard to get all those new cogs to mesh.
Beatriz Luna, a University of Pittsburgh professor of psychiatry who uses neuroimaging to study the teen brain, used a simple test that illustrates this learning curve. Luna scanned the brains of children, teens, and twentysomethings while they performed an antisaccade task, a sort of eyes-only video game where you have to stop yourself from looking at a suddenly appearing light. You view a screen on which the red crosshairs at the center occasionally disappear just as a light flickers elsewhere on the screen. Your instructions are to not look at the light and instead to look in the opposite direction. A sensor detects any eye movement. It's a tough assignment, since flickering lights naturally draw our attention. To succeed, you must override both a normal impulse to attend to new information and curiosity about something forbidden. Brain geeks call this response inhibition.
Ten-year-olds stink at it, failing about 45 percent of the time. Teens do much better. In fact, by age 15 they can score as well as adults if they're motivated, resisting temptation about 70 to 80 percent of the time. What Luna found most interesting, however, was not those scores. It was the brain scans she took while people took the test. Compared with adults, teens tended to make less use of brain regions that monitor performance, spot errors, plan, and stay focused—areas the adults seemed to bring online automatically. This let the adults use a variety of brain resources and better resist temptation, while the teens used those areas less often and more readily gave in to the impulse to look at the flickering light—just as they're more likely to look away from the road to read a text message.
If offered an extra reward, however, teens showed they could push those executive regions to work harder, improving their scores. And by age 20, their brains respond to this task much as the adults' do. Luna suspects the improvement comes as richer networks and faster connections make the executive region more effective.
These studies help explain why teens behave with such vexing inconsistency: beguiling at breakfast, disgusting at dinner; masterful on Monday, sleepwalking on Saturday. Along with lacking experience generally, they're still learning to use their brain's new networks. Stress, fatigue, or challenges can cause a misfire. Abigail Baird, a Vassar psychologist who studies teens, calls this neural gawkiness—an equivalent to the physical awkwardness teens sometimes display while mastering their growing bodies.
The slow and uneven developmental arc revealed by these imaging studies offers an alluringly pithy explanation for why teens may do stupid things like drive at 113 miles an hour, aggrieve their ancientry, and get people (or get gotten) with child: They act that way because their brains aren't done! You can see it right there in the scans!
This view, as titles from the explosion of scientific papers and popular articles about the "teen brain" put it, presents adolescents as "works in progress" whose "immature brains" lead some to question whether they are in a state "akin to mental retardation."
The story you're reading right now, however, tells a different scientific tale about the teen brain. Over the past five years or so, even as the work-in-progress story spread into our culture, the discipline of adolescent brain studies learned to do some more-complex thinking of its own. A few researchers began to view recent brain and genetic findings in a brighter, more flattering light, one distinctly colored by evolutionary theory. The resulting account of the adolescent brain—call it the adaptive-adolescent story—casts the teen less as a rough draft than as an exquisitely sensitive, highly adaptable creature wired almost perfectly for the job of moving from the safety of home into the complicated world outside.
This view will likely sit better with teens. More important, it sits better with biology's most fundamental principle, that of natural selection. Selection is hell on dysfunctional traits. If adolescence is essentially a collection of them—angst, idiocy, and haste; impulsiveness, selfishness, and reckless bumbling—then how did those traits survive selection? They couldn't—not if they were the period's most fundamental or consequential features.
The answer is that those troublesome traits don't really characterize adolescence; they're just what we notice most because they annoy us or put our children in danger. As B. J. Casey, a neuroscientist at Weill Cornell Medical College who has spent nearly a decade applying brain and genetic studies to our understanding of adolescence, puts it, "We're so used to seeing adolescence as a problem. But the more we learn about what really makes this period unique, the more adolescence starts to seem like a highly functional, even adaptive period. It's exactly what you'd need to do the things you have to do then."
To see past the distracting, dopey teenager and glimpse the adaptive adolescent within, we should look not at specific, sometimes startling, behaviors, such as skateboarding down stairways or dating fast company, but at the broader traits that underlie those acts.
Let's start with the teen's love of the thrill. We all like new and exciting things, but we never value them more highly than we do during adolescence. Here we hit a high in what behavioral scientists call sensation seeking: the hunt for the neural buzz, the jolt of the unusual or unexpected.
Seeking sensation isn't necessarily impulsive. You might plan a sensation-seeking experience—a skydive or a fast drive—quite deliberately, as my son did. Impulsivity generally drops throughout life, starting at about age 10, but this love of the thrill peaks at around age 15. And although sensation seeking can lead to dangerous behaviors, it can also generate positive ones: The urge to meet more people, for instance, can create a wider circle of friends, which generally makes us healthier, happier, safer, and more successful.
This upside probably explains why an openness to the new, though it can sometimes kill the cat, remains a highlight of adolescent development. A love of novelty leads directly to useful experience. More broadly, the hunt for sensation provides the inspiration needed to "get you out of the house" and into new terrain, as Jay Giedd, a pioneering researcher in teen brain development at NIH, puts it.
Also peaking during adolescence (and perhaps aggrieving the ancientry the most) is risk-taking. We court risk more avidly as teens than at any other time. This shows reliably in the lab, where teens take more chances in controlled experiments involving everything from card games to simulated driving. And it shows in real life, where the period from roughly 15 to 25 brings peaks in all sorts of risky ventures and ugly outcomes. This age group dies of accidents of almost every sort (other than work accidents) at high rates. Most long-term drug or alcohol abuse starts during adolescence, and even people who later drink responsibly often drink too much as teens. Especially in cultures where teenage driving is common, this takes a gory toll: In the U.S., one in three teen deaths is from car crashes, many involving alcohol.
Are these kids just being stupid? That's the conventional explanation: They're not thinking, or by the work-in-progress model, their puny developing brains fail them.
Yet these explanations don't hold up. As Laurence Steinberg, a developmental psychologist specializing in adolescence at Temple University, points out, even 14- to 17-year-olds—the biggest risk takers—use the same basic cognitive strategies that adults do, and they usually reason their way through problems just as well as adults. Contrary to popular belief, they also fully recognize they're mortal. And, like adults, says Steinberg, "teens actually overestimate risk."
So if teens think as well as adults do and recognize risk just as well, why do they take more chances? Here, as elsewhere, the problem lies less in what teens lack compared with adults than in what they have more of. Teens take more risks not because they don't understand the dangers but because they weigh risk versus reward differently: In situations where risk can get them something they want, they value the reward more heavily than adults do.
A video game Steinberg uses draws this out nicely. In the game, you try to drive across town in as little time as possible. Along the way you encounter several traffic lights. As in real life, the traffic lights sometimes turn from green to yellow as you approach them, forcing a quick go-or-stop decision. You save time—and score more points—if you drive through before the light turns red. But if you try to drive through the red and don't beat it, you lose even more time than you would have if you had stopped for it. Thus the game rewards you for taking a certain amount of risk but punishes you for taking too much.
When teens drive the course alone, in what Steinberg calls the emotionally "cool" situation of an empty room, they take risks at about the same rates that adults do. Add stakes that the teen cares about, however, and the situation changes. In this case Steinberg added friends: When he brought a teen's friends into the room to watch, the teen would take twice as many risks, trying to gun it through lights he'd stopped for before. The adults, meanwhile, drove no differently with a friend watching.
To Steinberg, this shows clearly that risk-taking rises not from puny thinking but from a higher regard for reward.
"They didn't take more chances because they suddenly downgraded the risk," says Steinberg. "They did so because they gave more weight to the payoff."
Researchers such as Steinberg and Casey believe this risk-friendly weighing of cost versus reward has been selected for because, over the course of human evolution, the willingness to take risks during this period of life has granted an adaptive edge. Succeeding often requires moving out of the home and into less secure situations. "The more you seek novelty and take risks," says Baird, "the better you do." This responsiveness to reward thus works like the desire for new sensation: It gets you out of the house and into new turf.
As Steinberg's driving game suggests, teens respond strongly to social rewards. Physiology and evolutionary theory alike offer explanations for this tendency. Physiologically, adolescence brings a peak in the brain's sensitivity to dopamine, a neurotransmitter that appears to prime and fire reward circuits and aids in learning patterns and making decisions. This helps explain the teen's quickness of learning and extraordinary receptivity to reward—and his keen, sometimes melodramatic reaction to success as well as defeat.
The teen brain is similarly attuned to oxytocin, another neural hormone, which (among other things) makes social connections in particular more rewarding. The neural networks and dynamics associated with general reward and social interactions overlap heavily. Engage one, and you often engage the other. Engage them during adolescence, and you light a fire.
This helps explain another trait that marks adolescence: Teens prefer the company of those their own age more than ever before or after. At one level, this passion for same-age peers merely expresses in the social realm the teen's general attraction to novelty: Teens offer teens far more novelty than familiar old family does.
Yet teens gravitate toward peers for another, more powerful reason: to invest in the future rather than the past. We enter a world made by our parents. But we will live most of our lives, and prosper (or not) in a world run and remade by our peers. Knowing, understanding, and building relationships with them bears critically on success. Socially savvy rats or monkeys, for instance, generally get the best nesting areas or territories, the most food and water, more allies, and more sex with better and fitter mates. And no species is more intricately and deeply social than humans are.
This supremely human characteristic makes peer relations not a sideshow but the main show. Some brain-scan studies, in fact, suggest that our brains react to peer exclusion much as they respond to threats to physical health or food supply. At a neural level, in other words, we perceive social rejection as a threat to existence. Knowing this might make it easier to abide the hysteria of a 13-year-old deceived by a friend or the gloom of a 15-year-old not invited to a party. These people! we lament. They react to social ups and downs as if their fates depended upon them! They're right. They do.
Excitement, novelty, risk, the company of peers. These traits may seem to add up to nothing more than doing foolish new stuff with friends. Look deeper, however, and you see that these traits that define adolescence make us more adaptive, both as individuals and as a species. That's doubtless why these traits, broadly defined, seem to show themselves in virtually all human cultures, modern or tribal. They may concentrate and express themselves more starkly in modern Western cultures, in which teens spend so much time with each other. But anthropologists have found that virtually all the world's cultures recognize adolescence as a distinct period in which adolescents prefer novelty, excitement, and peers. This near-universal recognition sinks the notion that it's a cultural construct.
Culture clearly shapes adolescence. It influences its expression and possibly its length. It can magnify its manifestations. Yet culture does not create adolescence. The period's uniqueness rises from genes and developmental processes that have been selected for over thousands of generations because they play an amplified role during this key transitional period: producing a creature optimally primed to leave a safe home and move into unfamiliar territory.
The move outward from home is the most difficult thing that humans do, as well as the most critical—not just for individuals but for a species that has shown an unmatched ability to master challenging new environments. In scientific terms, teenagers can be a pain in the ass. But they are quite possibly the most fully, crucially adaptive human beings around. Without them, humanity might not have so readily spread across the globe.
This adaptive-adolescence view, however accurate, can be tricky to come to terms with—the more so for parents dealing with teens in their most trying, contrary, or flat-out scary moments. It's reassuring to recast worrisome aspects as signs of an organism learning how to negotiate its surroundings. But natural selection swings a sharp edge, and the teen's sloppier moments can bring unbearable consequences. We may not run the risk of being killed in ritualistic battles or being eaten by leopards, but drugs, drinking, driving, and crime take a mighty toll. My son lives, and thrives, sans car, at college. Some of his high school friends, however, died during their driving experiments. Our children wield their adaptive plasticity amid small but horrific risks.
We parents, of course, often stumble too, as we try to walk the blurry line between helping and hindering our kids as they adapt to adulthood. The United States spends about a billion dollars a year on programs to counsel adolescents on violence, gangs, suicide, sex, substance abuse, and other potential pitfalls. Few of them work.
Yet we can and do help. We can ward off some of the world's worst hazards and nudge adolescents toward appropriate responses to the rest. Studies show that when parents engage and guide their teens with a light but steady hand, staying connected but allowing independence, their kids generally do much better in life. Adolescents want to learn primarily, but not entirely, from their friends. At some level and at some times (and it's the parent's job to spot when), the teen recognizes that the parent can offer certain kernels of wisdom—knowledge valued not because it comes from parental authority but because it comes from the parent's own struggles to learn how the world turns. The teen rightly perceives that she must understand not just her parents' world but also the one she is entering. Yet if allowed to, she can appreciate that her parents once faced the same problems and may remember a few things worth knowing.
Meanwhile, in times of doubt, take inspiration in one last distinction of the teen brain—a final key to both its clumsiness and its remarkable adaptability. This is the prolonged plasticity of those late-developing frontal areas as they slowly mature. As noted earlier, these areas are the last to lay down the fatty myelin insulation—the brain's white matter—that speeds transmission. And at first glance this seems like bad news: If we need these areas for the complex task of entering the world, why aren't they running at full speed when the challenges are most daunting?
The answer is that speed comes at the price of flexibility. While a myelin coating greatly accelerates an axon's bandwidth, it also inhibits the growth of new branches from the axon. According to Douglas Fields, an NIH neuroscientist who has spent years studying myelin, "This makes the period when a brain area lays down myelin a sort of crucial period of learning—the wiring is getting upgraded, but once that's done, it's harder to change."
The window in which experience can best rewire those connections is highly specific to each brain area. Thus the brain's language centers acquire their insulation most heavily in the first 13 years, when a child is learning language. The completed insulation consolidates those gains—but makes further gains, such as second languages, far harder to come by.
So it is with the forebrain's myelination during the late teens and early 20s. This delayed completion—a withholding of readiness—heightens flexibility just as we confront and enter the world that we will face as adults.
This long, slow, back-to-front developmental wave, completed only in the mid-20s, appears to be a uniquely human adaptation. It may be one of our most consequential. It can seem a bit crazy that we humans don't wise up a bit earlier in life. But if we smartened up sooner, we'd end up dumber.
"
This online article ( link address: http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/print/2011/10/teenage-brains/dobbs-text)  mainly discusses the issues of the brains of teenagers. Through this article, we can see the many flaws and advantages of the typical teenager brain. However, the article had also stated "The move outward from home is the most difficult thing that humans do, as well as the most critical—not just for individuals but for a species that has shown an unmatched ability to master challenging new environments. In scientific terms, teenagers can be a pain in the ass. But they are quite possibly the most fully, crucially adaptive human beings around. Without them, humanity might not have so readily spread across the globe." which shows that brains of teenagers can be important and a crucial part of humanity, being able to impact the world greatly, whether positive or negative. This shows that adults can learn from teenagers in terms of doing things, and find alternatives to doing tasks just by observing the way teenagers themselves do it. Negative or not, this article definitely shows the brains of teenagers should never be underestimated.