Analysis of Teenagers With Jobs and School

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Teenage years are a unique and questionable time in life. The kids are old enough to where they should be able to earn money on their own, and yet they are young enough to where they should still be under the care of their parents or caregivers. Teenagers find themselves getting afterschool jobs for many reasons. The normal reasons would include: spending money for going out with friends, gas money, or for the ability to obtain the newly released technology. After school jobs seem to help teenagers learn responsibilities and appreciate the value of hard work and the money that follows. After school jobs can cause more problems than most people think. These jobs take away a lot of the time these teenagers should be spending on education, their academic performance is declining, and it is wearing out the teenagers physically and mentally. The only way an afterschool job could be helpful to a maturing young adult is if it is in the right dosage. Upon adulthood, money is needed for almost everything. It is needed for food, clothing, shelter, and everyone’s favorite, leisure activities. High school is a crucial time in a child’s life. It is where the child begins to slowly become independent from his or her caregiver and where they begin to finally realize who they truly are. Teens spend the majority of their time in a school-like setting, normally for around eight hours a day. Likewise adults normally spend eight hours a day at work also, for normally forty hours a week. This school like setting for these teenagers is their jobs, they are spending the same amount of time that adults do at work, at school. These teenagers are already working a full time job, with some overtime added on whenever they are assigned homework, or when the... ... middle of paper ... ...hool and college. Their success in high school will reflect on where they get to attend in college, which will ultimately affect how successful they are in the real world. There is a fine line as to how much a student should be working during a school year, to be successful you must get as close to that line as possible, without crossing over. Works Cited ASCD. Dan Laitsch"The Effect of Employment on Student Outcomes in High School and Beyond." Research Brief (2005): N.P. Dundes, L. and Marx, J. (2006). Balancing Work and Academics in College: Why do Students Working 10­19 Hours Per Week Excel? Journal of College Student Retention, 8(1) 107­120. Hammond, Shawn. "Effects of Employment on Student Success." Provo: BYU Employment Services, December 2006. 1-4. “Teenagers and Afterschool Jobs.” Health Encyclopedia. University of Rochester Medical Center. N.d. web.

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