PLATFORM : What Kids ‘Tell’
- Share via
Children often volunteer very personal information in regular classroom assignments. And if a child is seriously worried, it can be good for a teacher to know that and try to help. Under the state curriculum, 7th-grade science covers substance abuse. Sometimes my students write about such things as a parent who is alcoholic. This gives me a chance to talk with the student; I might tell him or her that alcoholism is a disease, and it’s not the child’s fault a parent is drinking.
What adults must understand is that they can’t base their thinking on the way things were; these kids must confront things about sexuality, substance abuse and violence that their parents didn’t have to deal with until they were adults.
I believe parents worried about our society are concentrating on the wrong targets. To me, the real culprits are the companies--the advertisers and the media and entertainment moguls--who have broken down the barrier between childhood and adulthood. For instance, showing pre-pubescent children in designer clothes and sexual poses, they try to empower kids to pressure their parents into spending money. This so-called market strategy has tremendously undermined America’s moral values, as well as the confidence in adult authority that children need.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.