There have been a wide range of reactions to Adolescence with charities which call for social media and device bans for children reporting an uptick in support for their causes in some countries. British Prime Minister, Sir Keir Starmer instigated an Adolescence conversation in Parliament, and Sir Gareth Southgate went viral for a speech calling for positive male role models to step up for boys. More and more schools are calling for device bans, and masculinity researchers are calling for a reframing of the ‘crisis of masculinity’ and more resources. All these hard conversations, and many of the ideas stemming from them hold merit, but there’s also a society-wide call to also address issues in modern parenting and schooling.
- Instilling a values-based upbringing – “Children, adolescents and even, young adults are looking for direction and guidance from the grown-ups in their lives,” Jaco says. “Have an explicit, actionable set of family values that provides children with the moral and ethical framework to grow and live by. As role models, parents and teachers, we must embody these values, not just speak to them. Strong values and compelling examples of adults that live by these values make kids more resilient and clearer when they are faced with internet content that contradicts their foundational values. At TCC, our mentors use our bespoke values curriculum to teach and model respect, courage, self-discipline, kindness and honesty.”
- Maintaining an impeccable digital health regime at home – As parents we feel instinctively that a child sitting alone on their computer or phone, in their bedroom with a closed door, for hours on end is not good for them. Yet, too often, we are reluctant to make the rules and changes that will improve the situation. Jaco says, “In some cases, parents don’t want to upset their child with new restrictions. Others don’t want to change their own digital habits to fit the new house rules. And there are some that want the space and peace that comes with their child engrossed in screens. But we must recognise that digital health must be taken seriously in the Information Age. Nowadays, it is a clear parental responsibility to know where your child is ranging around in the digital landscape and who they are engaging with. The issue is not one of privacy, but of child safety. Digital health experts are clear that for safety and sleep – there should be no internet-connected devices in any bedrooms, behind closed doors. Our phones are so addictive, for parents as well as children, and as a family we should be always looking for ways to spend device-free times with each other.”
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Engaging in deep, consistent, meaningful relationships with children – Jaco says, “Perhaps the most heartbreaking scene of all in Adolescence is the moment when the parents of the boy accept that they didn’t necessarily do anything ‘wrong’ in the raising of their son, but that they could have ‘done something more’. This was about the quality of their connection to him. They were shocked and bewildered that he had murdered, because they had completely lost track of him in the digital world. Online influencers had become more consequential in his life than they were, and they didn’t even know that this was happening in their son’s life, and in their relationship with him.”The lesson is that we cannot skim over the relationship with our child, no matter how busy, stressed and stretched we are. We are either in it, or we’re not. Meaningful engagement comes from consistent and intentional open communication, without judgement and full of loving acceptance.