10 Tips for Parents To Help Their Children Avoid Teen Pregnancy.
The National Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy offers these 10 tips for parents:
1. Be clear about your own sexual values and attitudes. It will be much easier for you to talk with your child if you have thought through these questions:
2. Talk with your children early and often about sex and love. Be specific. The most important thing you can do is to say the first few words. Be honest and open. Listen carefully to find out what your child already understands. Make your conversations back and forth—two ways. Talking with your children about sex will not encourage them to become sexually active. Kids need just as much help understanding how relationships work and the meaning of 10 Tips for Parents To Help Their Children Avoid Teen Pregnancy sex as they do in understanding how all the body parts work. What’s the difference between love and sex? Let your children know what you value and believe—and then be sure to be a good role model and “walk the talk.” It’s important that your child feel comfortable asking you questions about anything—not just questions about sex. Do your best to be an “askable” parent. Let your children know that they can talk with you about whatever they are thinking or worrying about.
3. Supervise and monitor your children’s activities. Know where your children are at all times. Are they safe? What are they doing? Are they involved in useful activities? If they aren’t with you, are responsible adults supervising them? You may be accused of being too snoopy, but you can help your children understand that parents who care know where their kids are.
4. Know your children’s friends and their families.Since peers have a strong influence on teens, do your best to help your children choose friends from families with similar values. Welcome your children’s friends into your home, and talk with them regularly. Talk with their parents about curfews, common rules and expectations.
5. Discourage early, frequent and steady dating. Encourage group activities. Long before your child asks you if he or she can date a certain person, make it clear that one-on-one dating before 16 can lead to trouble. Letting your children know ahead of time will help them see that you are not reacting to a particular person or invitation.
6. Take a strong stand against teens dating people who are significantly older or younger than they are. Try setting a limit of no more than a 2 - year age difference. Power differences can lead into risky situations—including unwanted and unprotected sex.
7. Help your teens have options for the future that are much more attractive than early pregnancy and parenthood. Help them set real, meaningful goals for their future. Talk with them about what they will need to do to reach their goals, and help them reach these goals. Help them see how becoming a parent can derail the best of plans. For example, child care expenses can make it almost impossible to afford college.
Help them learn to use their free time in constructive ways—being sure they set aside time to do their homework. Community service can help teach them job skills, and can put them in touch with a variety of committed and caring adults.
8. Emphasize how much you value education. Set high expectations for your child’s school performance. If your child is not progressing well in school, intervene early. School failure is one of the key risk factors for teen parenthood. Keep track of your children’s grades and meet with teachers. Volunteer at school if you can. Limit teen’s after-school jobs to no more than 20 hours per week, so there is ample time for homework—and enough time left over for restful sleep and socializing.
9. Know what your kids are watching, reading and listening to. Messages about sex sent by the media (TV, radio, movies, music videos, magazines, the Internet) are almost certainly at odds with your values. Be “media literate” about what you and your family are watching and reading. Teach your children to think critically; talk with them about what they are learning from the programs they watch and the music they listen to.
10. Strive for a relationship that is warm and affectionate—firm in discipline and rich in communication.Emphasize mutual trust and respect.
Pat Tanner Nelson, Ed.D.Extension Family & Human Development Specialistptnelson@udel.edu
Adapted from information prepared for Oregon State University Extension by Dr. Jan Hare, and from materials by Lawrence Altman, Eleanor Macklin, Karen Pittman and the national PTA.
Suggested citation: Nelson, P.T. (Ed) (2012). 10 Tips for Parents in Families Matter! A Series for Parents of School-Aged Youth. Newark, DE: Cooperative Extension, University of Delaware.-REV0712
10 Things You Learned in Sex Ed That Aren’t Actually True
Photo: Natalia Kopylcova (Shutterstock)
So much of school is geared toward preparing you for “the real world,” and teachers constantly tell you this. Some classes prepare you for college, some give you skills for life (hey, home ec), and then, in the middle of all this, is a sex ed class that seems to assume you’ll stay a celibate teenager forever.
Whatever your opinion on the morality of sex as a teenager, eventually most of us will have some kind of sex with somebody. Even if you and your partner are abstinent until marriage, what then? You’ll still have to deal with issues surrounding your sexual health and well-being.
And unfortunately, people are sometimes forced to have sex against their will. A virginity pledge isn’t a magic force field against rape. It’s important to know about things like emergency contraception and post-exposure prophylaxis.
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