The article I read for teenage drinking is called, “Study:
Does Alcohol in Movies Drive Teens to Binge Drink?” This article was published
on March 5, 2012. I got this article on the Time Magazine website, http://healthland.time.com/2012/03/05/study-does-alcohol-in-movies-drive-teens-to-binge-drink.
This article talked about doing a study and figuring out whether teens are
getting the idea that drinking is ok from movies. Studies suggest that when
teens see drinking scenes from movies, they are more likely to binge drink. This
is not definite yet, because they are not sure if that’s the whole reason
behind it. Although, they have done surveys on how many times characters were
shown drinking alcohol in movies. They have totaled about 86 percent out of 655
movies were showing at least one drinking scene. Then they took about 16,000
teens that were from the ages of 10 to 19 and gave them a survey on how many
times they seen a movie that has at least one drinking scene. The end result,
the students have at least seen more than 10,000 alcohol scenes totaled
altogether. This then leads to some of them thinking that drinking is ok, that
movie stars are doing it and tempts them to try it. What they are suggesting
now is to have parents watch shows, movies, and talk about what they are
watching with the teens, but not to the extent of having “parental controls.” I
honestly think movies can play a small part of this, because some scenes just
show when an adult drinks, nothing happens to them. We all know that alcohol
can do much more than just what we seen on the actual screen.
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Sunday, October 21, 2012
Study: More Teens Smoking Pot Than Cigarettes
The article I have read for teenage smoking is called, “Study:
More Teens Smoking Pot Than Cigarettes.” This article was published on June 11,
2012. I got this article online on the Time Magazine website, http://newsfeed.time.com/2012/06/11/study-more-teens-smoking-pot-than-cigarettes.
What I have read about on this article was that teens are looking more to
smoking marijuana than cigarettes. The reason is because most teens are getting
the message about what cigarettes can do to you and can cause lung cancer. I
guess they learned from all the anti-smoking campaigns, personal experiences,
and through family members that suffered from this condition. So they think smoking marijuana will be safer
because it wouldn’t cause any harm. That is not true though, what they don’t
know is that marijuana has a long-term effect on learning and memory. Their
minds could be damaged and wouldn’t be able to learn as well as they use to and
even to remember things, events, and so forth. Marijuana contains 50-70 percent
more carcinogenic hydrocarbons than tobacco does. When researchers did a survey
last year, the results were that twenty-seven percent of high school students
were smoking pot than cigarettes. Then eighteen percent were smoking cigarettes
still, and this was out of 15,000 students in high school. This is still crazy
and I think these teens still need a lot to learn about marijuana and what it
could do to them because there is so much more that goes on with this type of
drug also. Even though people say marijuana is some-what a stress reliever, I don’t
believe it at all. All they are doing is losing their memory and learning
abilities.
Thursday, October 18, 2012
For Teenage Smokers, Removing the Allure of the Pack
The article I have read for teenage smoking is called, “For
Teenage Smokers, Removing the Allure of the Pack.” This article was published
on August 1, 2012, which was recently. I read this article online on New York
Times website, http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/08/01/for-teenage-smokers-removing-the-allure-of-the-pack.
Basically, this article was talking about why teenagers started smoking in the
first place and some ways to prevent teenagers to stop now or starting later.
According to researchers, they think stopping teens from smoking will be a
difficult task to do and prevent rather than stopping obesity. That’s how
serious and hard it could be to stop this. The reason teens start smoking is because
they think it’s “cool,” and try to impress their friends thinking they are
adults acting with a reckless behavior. Last year, about 18 percent of students
who were seniors were smokers in high school. This is very sad considering that
these teens know what smoking can do and yet they still have the guts to do
such a thing. They probably know they could get lung cancer later in their years;
this could cause major problems and maybe even their life. But yet, teens don’t
care about their health these days. One strategy they are trying to prevent this
from happening is that they want to make smoking look uncool by changing the
packages and so forth. I really think that this isn’t going to change a thing.
Teenagers are still going to smoke whether they care or not, this all ties in
with peer pressure too.
Wednesday, October 3, 2012
Teen Drinking Diaries
The article that I read for teen drinking is called “Teen
Drinking Diaries.” This article was published on June 25, 2010. I found this
article online on The New York Times website, http://roomfordebate.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/06/25/teenage-drinking-diaries.
This type of article was kind of different and it was more about the actual
teens writing about their experience with alcohol. Most of them tried it as
young as 15 or so, and they talk about their situations. I thought this was
pretty interesting because reading about it from a teenager who actually tried
it makes it seem more realistic. I don’t know if that makes sense but you
actually hear from the teenager instead of reading from research and all that
stuff that researchers come up with. Basically, these teenagers are telling us
that when you drink at a young age, you have no idea what’s in for you at the
end. You don’t know how much to chug, drink, how many shots to take, how long
you should, and the end results from it. Then that’s when you learn your lesson
from your hangover. The good thing is that they never drove under the influence,
which was probably the only smart thing they did. Other than that, they were
curious because their parents never informed them about alcohol. So this leads
up to the parents to come in and inform their children about this stuff, or
else they find out the hard way. This was something different but it helped me
understand my curiosity question because it was coming from the peers itself.
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