About/Contact Us   Tell Us What You Think Add/Update Listing Información en Español

Home
For tips on raising your pre-teen or teen, and links to additional resources.  New tip every month.   For help parenting your pre-teen or teen. For help finding educational, recreational and counseling services and activities.   Home Home For help parenting your pre-teen or teen. For help finding educational, recreational and counseling services and activities.   For tips on raising your pre-teen or teen, and links to additional resources.  New tip every month.


More Tips:

1. Telling Your Teens That You Love Them

2. What Your Teens Are Doing After School

3. Talking to Kids About Sex

4. Managing Holiday Stress and the Blues

5. TV and Your Teen

6. Physical Activity and Nutrition for Teens

7. Communicating Effectively with Teens

8. Giving Your Teens the Gifts of Time & Attention

9. Setting a Healthy Example

10. Supporting Your Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer* or Questioning Child

11. Teen Dating Violence

12. Praising Your Child

13. Internet Safety

14. Community Service and Family Volunteering

15. The Arts For Young People

16. Teen Suicide

17. Transition Planning: Preparing Your Teenager with Special Needs for Adulthood

18. Helping Your Child Say "No" to Tobacco

19. Listening

20. Setting an Example

21. Drinking and Partying

22. Asking for Help

23. Setting Rules

24. Talking to Your Teens, Even About Uncomfortable Things

25. Being There for Kids

26. Prom Anxiety

27. The Choking Game

28. Helping Teens Avoid Pregnancy

29. High School Graduation and Keeping Teens Safe

30. Summer Safety

31. Teens with Time on Their Hands in the Summer

32. How to Talk to Teens About Traumatic Events

33. Dangerous Hookah (Water Pipe) Smoking

34. Helping Children and Youth Adjust to a New School

35. Monitoring Social Sites Like MySpace

 

More Resources:

Web sites

American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry (Sponsored by the Campaign for America’s Kids)

Talk With Kids (A national campaign sponsored by Children Now and the Kaiser Foundation)

Kids Health For Kids (Sponsored by the Nemours Foundation)

Books

How to Talk to Your Kids About Really Important Things, 1994, by Charles E. Schaefer, Ph.D., and Theresa Foy DiGernonimo, M.Ed.

What Kids Need to Succeed: Proven, Practical Ways to Raise Good Kids, 1994 (revised 1998), by Peter L. Benson, PH.D., Judy Galbraith, M.A., and Pamela Espeland.

Ten Talks Parents Must Have with Their Children About Drugs & Choices, 2001, by Dominic Cappello and Xenia G. Becher, MSM, CSW.

Restoring the Teenage Soul: Nurturing Sound Hearts and Minds in a Confused Culture, 1999, by Margaret J. Meeker, M.D.

 

 


TIPS ON RAISING YOUR PRE-TEENS AND TEENS

Let's Talk About...

Spanish version

Talking to Your Teens, Even About Uncomfortable Things

printer icon  

Talking about uncomfortable things such as feelings, relationships, sex, or drugs can be hard. But most teens still want their parents’ advice. Your teens may act like they know everything, but don’t be fooled. Most say they still want their parents’ guidance and advice. Research shows that teens whose parents talk to them about alcohol and drugs are less likely to use them.1

Research also shows that teens whose parents talk to them about sex are less likely to have sex at a young age.2

So, be ready. Know the facts. Know what you want to say.

  • Talk to your kids about the pressures of growing up. Make it clear that everyone experiences fears and worries when they are teenagers. Make sure they know that they can come to you.
  • You may have to start the conversation. Get to know your children and the times they feel most comfortable. It could be bedtime, in the car or at the dinner table. To avoid appearing angry and placing blame, use “I” statements. For instance, “I feel there is a problem. Do you want to tell me what is going on?”
  • Talk to your kids about the risks of getting involved with sex, alcohol, other drugs, smoking and violence. Start early in childhood when your children are curious and begin to ask questions. As they get older, keep the communication going. Talk to them about being an individual and avoiding negative peer pressure.
  • Express your own values and attitudes. Be honest. Explain that you want them to make safer choices, because of sexually transmitted diseases, the dangers of drugs, alcohol and cigarettes and the responsibility and emotional stress of being a teenage parent. Remember, you can tell your kids about mistakes you made as a teenager. They will understand and respect you even more for your honesty.
  • Talk to your kids about the difference between love and sex. Kids need help understanding the meaning of sex. This is just as important as understanding how all the body parts work. Begin early encouraging your children to ask questions. Regardless of the question or response, remain calm and non-critical. Use words that are understandable and make you and your children feel comfortable. It may not be easy, but it is important and necessary that you talk about these things.
  • Talk about more than just teen pregnancy and disease. You don’t want your kids to think of sex as something bad or dirty. You want them to learn that there is a right time for sex and with it comes responsibilities.
  • Be very clear about what you expect your kids to do and not do. Look at your own values and tell them why you believe what you do and what you want for them. This may make it easier to talk about uncomfortable things, and help kids make good choices.
  • It’s OK to admit that you don’t know the answer to a question. Be honest and tell them you don’t have the answer. Then go find it together. You can use this time together to bond with your teens, which may make future conversations about uncomfortable things much easier.
Links to tips on talking to pre-teens and teens, updated monthly Links to workshops and classes for parents Links to services such as counseling and recreational activities Links to tips on talking to pre-teens and teens, updated monthly Links to services such as counseling and recreational activities Links to workshops and classes for parents