Monday, June 23, 2014

Time for your teen to get organized

A peek inside the book bag of many teenagers is really not so different than taking a look inside your kitchen trash can. Who knows what is shoved in there, however long ago, with little regard to what happens next. The difference is that the things in the book bag probably will be used again. The fact is, many teens and tweens struggle with organization but there is a lot that parents can do to help.
    You have to start by thinking about how personal organization evolves in a young person. Little children are not expected to be well organized. Often their teacher and parents maintain their book bag and mom or dad are completely in charge of what time practice and dentist appointments are. As a child gets older though, such responsibilities increase. By the time a child is a teenager, they have assumed the responsibility of maintaining their book bag, keeping things in their room in their place, and much of their own scheduling. What used to be keeping track of a couple of things has bloomed into a life full of responsibility. What’s more, just as adults face the harsh reality that their memory isn’t what it used to be, teens have to accept the fact that life grows too complicated to keep track of it with just their heads and without some level of organization.
    All effective adults have some way of keeping their acts together. Those methods can vary greatly from one person to the next, but they all have some format or procedure they’ve developed to keep themselves organized. Those methods probably came about over time, but they usually are effective in their own way. The unorganized and forgetful teen though has not yet figured out that he needs to be organized and has not developed his personal system to become so.
    Therefore, there comes a time in your parenting when you need to step in and say, “we have to change some habits.” It might be easiest to do this at the start of a school year and especially high school or whenever you see your student slipping sheerly due to unorganization.
    It is important to let your teen have some autonomy in the process. Don’t make them do the exact same thing you do. If you write everything down on a desk calendar and they want to use their phone’s note pad, that’s okay. The critical thing is that they are developing a way to keep track of all that they have going on. If you disagree with their methodology you can politely point out their method’s flaws and try to redirect them. This is a process that will have to have some trial and error and that can’t really be forced.
    The bottom line here is that at some point the shove-everything-loosely-into-your- book-bag-and-do-everything-else-by-memory-alone strategy is going to fall apart. When that happens, parents need to help flick the switch making teens aware that some habits needs to change in order to become effective adults. Teens will then need some assistance in developing those new habits, but they ultimately need to develop an organizational system that works for them in their life.