I am writing this on holiday in a less-developed SE Asian country,
where in one town I watched (western) ‘modern youth’ partying loudly and hard. They were perhaps not the best ambassadors
for their generation; while there was no malice, there was also little respect
for local customs, or even thought for others who were in the same space as the
party crowd, especially those who were living on a few dollars a day. Apparently the scene was far better than it
had been a few years ago when police were frequently involved, but I had to
stop myself thinking unkind thoughts about young people today. I know better, as a Principal, that the kind,
caring young adults vastly outnumber the others – but even leaving my own experiences
aside, there are two interesting perspectives here.
Firstly, ‘twas always thus.
Greek poet Hesiod wrote I see no
hope for the future of our people if they are dependent on frivolous youth of
today, for certainly all youth are reckless beyond words... the present youth
are exceedingly.. [disrespectful] and impatient of restraint nearly three
thousand years ago! I doubt he was the
first; he was certainly not the last, with medieval poet Geoffrey Chaucer
writing about youth language and slang, and 15th century writer Thomas Malory
about youngsters ruining marriage by being too eager to jump into bed. Recent incarnations about millennials can be
found here and here, for example – and so really, me worrying about ‘modern
youth’ likely says far more about me getting old than about anything else.
Secondly, and much more importantly, if there is any problem (perhaps the generations of complaining indicate
that there has always been a problem)
then why aren't we doing something about it?
And that’s the topic of this post – the remarkable success that one
country has had when it decided that it really wanted to tackle what it saw as
the problem. And when I say ‘tackle’ I
mean a serious attempt that involves resources and political capital, not just
easy soundbites and rhetoric.
One set of changes was obvious – legislation: the legal age of tobacco and alcohol purchase were raised to 18 and 20; tobacco and alcohol advertising were banned. Beyond these, clear differences between the lives of kids who took up drinking, smoking and other drugs, and those who didn’t led to pursuit of four protective factors:
l participation in organised
activities – especially sport – three or four times a week,
l not being outdoors in the late
evenings.
l total time spent with parents
during the week,
l feeling cared about at school
While I might vote for either of these initiatives, as a Principal and parent I am generally more interested in what’s in my control, and here the third and fourth points come into play. In Iceland parent-school links were strengthened through parental organisations in every school. Programmes were set up to encourage parents to attend talks on the importance of spending a quantity of time with their children rather than occasional ‘quality time’, on talking to their kids about their lives, on knowing who their kids were friends with, and on keeping their children home in the evenings (WEF 2018). To this end, agreements for parents to sign were introduced, with flexibility for schools to adapt them. Parents could pledge to follow all the recommendations, and also, for example, not to allow their kids to have unsupervised parties, not to buy alcohol for minors, and to keep an eye on the wellbeing of other children. (WEF 2018).
As far as the fourth factor goes, programmes in schools focused on improving young adults’ thoughts about themselves and their lives, and the way they interacted with other people. That’s different to the usual ‘just say no’ approach – because one works, and one doesn’t. The main principle was that drug education doesn’t work because nobody pays attention to it.... [Whereas] what is [actually]needed are the life skills to act on that information says psychologist Harvey Milkman.
While none of these four factors are exactly surprising, they do need interpretation in any given context; there is no magic bullet here. For example, the WEF report notes that in one un-named Baltic country, participation in organised sport actually emerged as a risk factor – because it turns out that many clubs run by young ex-military men involved muscle-building drugs, drinking and smoking. So we need to proceed with care.
But to me the message is clear; that if we are concerned about the behaviours of our youngsters then hand-wringing is a self-indulgent and self-serving luxury unless it is accompanied by data-informed action. So it comes down to our collective social will to look after our children. Finnish student Annika Koljonen is scathing about the measures we are used to talking about in the UK, where you tell people to try harder, eat better, smoke less, and exercise more – implying it is all down to the individual. We can do better than that, as parents, schools and societies.
References
Koljonen, A (2018) Life
expectancy is rising in Finland – unlike in the UK. What’s going right?
The Guardian
Proud, A (2015) Crybaby
millennials need to stop whinging and work hard like the rest of us. The
Telegraph.
Roberts, B. W., Edmonds, G, Grajalva, E. (2017) It Is Developmental Me, Not Generation Me. Perspectives in Psychological Sciences. 2010 Jan 1;
5(1): 97–102
This post is as thought provoking as always Nick. I think that there probably is a strong correlation between these statistics you give above about the decreasing rating of drinking/smoking etc.. and the increased time spent with parents, participation in organised sports etc for young people and the high rates of female empowerment in Iceland (see for example from the World Economic Forum: https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2017/11/why-iceland-ranks-first-gender-equality/ ), especially in the form of women in positions of political power. The types of government policies that would be driving these initiatives for young people are very likely to be born out of the amount of women involved in policy formation. In Iceland I believe that we are seeing what happens when women have an equal seat at the table, and as you suggest there are lessons here that we can all learn from.
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Melanie
That's a great point Mel, and seems entirely plausible. I guess it would be intersting to look at other countries where women are well-represented in power (I do not know - Germany? Holland? ) and compare.
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