19-Year-Old Parenting Tools

By: Center for Health and Safety Culture
  • Summary

  • Your nineteen-year-old is in the process of learning and establishing lifestyle habits that will extend throughout their lifetime. Although your teen is considered an adult, they still have a lot to learn. Giving teens the chance to make choices now while parents and those in a parenting role are able to lend support, will make them better prepared when they leave home. Parenting a teen while also allowing them independence is not easy. Parents and those in a parenting role can do simple things today to build a strong relationship with their teen. A healthy relationship will allow you to guide your teen in managing their own behavior, solving problems, and making healthy choices. ToolsforYourChildsSuccess.org provides a process and tools for parents and those in a parenting role to engage their teens in meaningful interactions to grow their skills for a successful future. This podcast shares ToolsforYourChildsSuccess.org resources that will teach you to support your teen in building vital social and emotional skills. Watching your teen gain more independence in the world is exciting as well as nerve racking. ToolsforYourChildsSuccess.org provides parents and those in a parenting role tools to support their teens’ growth during this important transition to adulthood. The Montana Department of Health and Human Services partnered with the Center for Health and Safety Culture at Montana State University to promote healthy mental, emotional, and behavioral growth through the resources available from ToolsforYourChildsSuccess.org. While initially developed for parents and those in a parenting role in Montana, these parenting tools are relevant for parents everywhere. The process you will learn to use in this podcast includes the following five steps: Gain Input, Teach, Practice, Support, and Recognize. Following this process in your daily interactions with your teen empowers them to understand themselves and face challenges while growing a genuine relationship with you. The key to many parenting challenges is finding ways to communicate so that both your needs and your teen’s needs are met. After gaining confidence using the process, you and your teen will be prepared to overcome struggles today and in the future. The tools available for parenting your nineteen-year-old include: Anger, Back Talk, Bullying, Chores, Confidence, Conflict, Discipline, Establishing Rules About Alcohol, Friends, Homework, Listening, Lying, Mixed Messages About Alcohol, Peer Pressure, Reading, Routines, and Stress. Listen today to strengthen your relationship with your teen while growing their skills for success!
    Copyright 2024 Center for Health and Safety Culture
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Episodes
  • Lying for Your 19-Year-Old
    Sep 24 2024

    Trust is a vital foundation for healthy relationships. As a parent or someone in a parenting role, you play an essential role in your nineteen-year-old’s success. There are intentional ways to grow a healthy parent-teen relationship and understand how to promote trust in your teen.

    Teens and emerging young adults ages 15-19 are in the process of exerting their independence and spending more time with peers. They are working on understanding and predicting others’ thoughts and feelings. As they do, they also may seek to hide the truth, particularly if they fear harsh judgment from respected adults or peers. They are also testing boundaries and taking more risks socially and academically. Often, that risk-taking can lead to mistakes, misbehaviors, or even failure. Teens may be tempted to cover up their failures or want to take risks their parents may not permit.

    Though younger children cannot distinguish between the subtleties of deception, teens and emerging adults can understand the differences between honest mistakes, guesses, and exaggerations, as well as sarcasm and irony. As part of their cognitive and moral development, a full understanding of lying and its consequences continues to develop throughout childhood and adolescence.

    The key to many parenting challenges, like raising teens who learn the value of truth-telling, is finding ways to communicate to meet your and your teen’s needs. The steps below will prepare you to help your teen learn more about your family values, how they relate to lying, and how you can grow and deepen your trusting relationship.

    Why Lying?

    Whether it’s your fifteen-year-old lying about where they went after school or your seventeen-year-old lying about failing a test, your teen’s ability to tell the truth can become a regular challenge if you don’t create plans and strategies.

    Today, in the short term, honesty can create

    ● greater opportunities for connection and enjoyment

    ● trust in each other

    ● a sense of well-being for a parent and teens

    ● added daily peace of mind

    Tomorrow, in the long term, your teen

    ● builds skills in self-awareness

    ● builds skills in social awareness, perspective-taking, empathy, and compassion

    ● builds skills in self-control

    ● develops moral and consequential thinking and decision-making

    Five Steps for Teaching Your Teen About Honesty

    This five-step process helps you teach your teen about honesty. It also builds essential skills in your teen. The same process can also be used to address other parenting issues (learn more about the process[1] ).

    Tip: These steps are best when you and your teen are not tired or in a rush.
    Tip: Intentional communication[2] and a healthy parenting relationship[3] support these steps.
    Step 1. Get Your Teen Thinking by Getting Their Input

    You can get your teen thinking about honesty by asking them open-ended questions. You’ll help prompt your teen’s thinking. You’ll also better understand their thoughts, feelings, and challenges related to honesty so that you can address them. In gaining input, your teen

    ● has the opportunity to become more aware of how they are thinking and feeling related to lies and truth

    ● can begin to formulate what it means to be in a trusting

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    21 mins
  • Reading for Your 19-Year-Old
    Sep 24 2024

    As a parent or someone in a parenting role, you play an essential role in your teen’s success. There are intentional ways to grow a healthy parent-teen relationship, and growing reading skills is a great way to do it.

    Reading is essential for your teen’s success in school. Reading also plays a critical role in your teen’s

    ● social and emotional development[1]

    ● language competence

    ● executive functions like working memory and self-control ^1^

    ● connection to you

    ● empathy and understanding of others

    ● imagination (ability to “see” the story) ^2^

    ● ability to choose healthy behaviors (preventing high-risk behaviors and unhealthy choices)

    Researchers have found that social, emotional, and cognitive development cannot be separated. They directly and indirectly impact one another. ^3^ Teens exercise their responsible decision-making skills and moral development as they reflect on their favorite characters’ choices and outcomes.

    Teens ages fifteen to nineteen are in the process of learning how to read larger, more complicated texts and extracting meaning from them. They are required, in school, to think abstractly about their reading and to decipher metaphors, symbols, and cultural themes. Your teen will establish critical learning habits through reading that will extend throughout their school years. Reading is best learned with parents, grandparents, and other loved ones. In fact, “The single most important activity for building skills essential for reading success appears to be reading aloud to children.” ^4^

    Parents tend to stop reading aloud as children age and become more competent readers. However, even high school and college students (and adults) benefit from collaborative reading or reading aloud. In reading together, you deepen your caring connection (relationship skills). You are imagining together. You are making meaning of words and worlds. You and your teen gain insight into characters’ inner lives (thoughts and feelings) in a way that no other source can allow you access (social awareness). And with that exploration of others’ experiences, you learn more about yourself (self-awareness) and what you value (responsible decision-making).

    In addition to reading aloud together, there is value in reading on your own together. Older teens can pause and reflect with you about the complexities of what they are reading. Those discussions can deepen your intimacy and their social awareness and understanding of the text, in addition to exploring the feelings and symbolism they may encounter.

    Yet, anyone can face challenges when it comes to establishing a daily reading routine. Families today are busier than ever, with more demands on their time.

    Teenagers are highly entertained and stimulated by technology, so it may take more encouragement than past generations to start reading. But once you get into a routine and make it a joyful experience, it can enrich your family life and deepen your intimacy while promoting valuable skills for school and life success. The steps below include specific, practical strategies and effective conversation starters to support family reading cooperatively.

    Why Reading?

    Becoming intentional about a daily reading routine, looking for ways to incorporate reading into your family time spent together, and considering the quality of the experience of how you read together can all contribute to a teen’s development.

    Today, in the short term, reading can create

    ● greater...

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    22 mins
  • Homework for Your 19-Year-Old
    Sep 24 2024

    As a parent or someone in a parenting role, you play an essential role in your teen’s success. There are intentional ways to grow a healthy parent-teen relationship, and setting up a daily homework routine provides an excellent opportunity.

    Teens ages fifteen to nineteen are adapting their early school-age learning habits to meet their more demanding workload. They are establishing critical learning habits that will extend throughout their school years, including how they approach research and study. In addition to managing daily homework assignments, fifteen-to-nineteen-year-olds will be assigned longer-term projects. These may include research, writing, group coordination, and reading novels or longer nonfiction works. Frequently, teachers leave the planning and organizing of those projects up to the students. In these situations, teens may be challenged by tackling new, more complex content and figuring out how to work on the project over time. This can be a great test of patience.

    For most teens, homework is a nightly and ongoing reality. Research shows that a parent or someone in a parenting role plays a key role. Teens with a parent or someone in a parenting role supporting their learning at home and engaged in their school community have more consistent school attendance, better social skills, and higher grade point averages and test scores than those without. ^1^ Indeed, the best predictor of students’ academic achievement is parental involvement.

    Yet, there are challenges. You may discover outdated and incomplete assignments crumpled in your teen’s backpack. Or, your teen may procrastinate on a long-term project until it becomes a crisis the night before it’s due. Questioning their work may result in arguments when they have other goals.

    While getting a regular homework routine going might be challenging, it can be a positive experience and promote valuable skills for school and life success. The steps below include specific, practical strategies and effective conversation starters to support a homework routine.

    Why Homework?

    Teens and emerging young adults are managing a larger and more complex workload, new study skills, and longer-term projects. This will take a whole new level of planning and organization. Layered in with the day-to-day school assignments, there may also be future academic goals they want to reach (like going to college), which will require planning and incremental action steps. Schoolwork and school goals can become a daily challenge if you don’t create regular routines with input from your teen in advance, clarify roles and responsibilities, and establish a plan for success.

    Today, in the short term, homework routines can create

    ● greater cooperation and motivation

    ● greater opportunities for connection and enjoyment as you each implement your respective roles and feel set up for success

    ● trust in each other that you have the competence to complete your responsibilities with practice and care

    ● less frustration due to better organization, space, and resources

    ● opportunities to learn about your teen’s school curriculum

    ● added daily peace of mind

    Tomorrow, in the long term, your teen

    ● builds skills in collaboration and cooperative goal-setting

    ● builds skills in responsible decision-making, hard work, and persistence

    ● gains independence, life skills competence, and self-sufficiency

    ● develops positive learning habits that contribute directly to school success

    Five Steps for Creating a Homework...
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    30 mins

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