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Keeping Latch-Key Kids Off of Drugs

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Uploaded by on May 20, 2008

If job responsibilities and longer work hours keep parents from being home with their children immediately after school, they can still monitor their kids' activities during this critical time.

Seven and a half million children in the United States between ages 5 and 14 are latchkey kids, according to the National Institute on Out-of-School-Time. Research confirms that kids are less likely to get into trouble when a responsible adult is watching them. In a study published by the American Academy of Pediatrics, researchers found that eighth graders who are unsupervised more than 10 hours a week are about 10 percent more likely to try marijuana, and twice as likely to smoke cigarettes or drink alcohol, as eighth-graders who are not unsupervised during the week.

For parents who can't be home with their kids after school, Dr. Phillippe Cunningham, a research scientist at the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences Medical University of South Carolina, suggests taking the following actions:

* Make every effort to ensure that your child is spending time in constructive, adult-supervised activities such as: Sports, jobs, clubs, daycare, after-school programs, and religious youth groups. If your kids have to be at home, make sure they are working on homework or doing chores-not hanging out with friends.

* At all times, know where your children are, who they are spending time with, and how you can reach them.

* Have your kids check in with you at regular intervals. Give them change, a phone card, or a beeper with clear rules about using it (e.g., "When I beep you, I expect a call back within 5 minutes.")

* Randomly check that your kids are where they say they are.

* Take advantage of the time that you and your child do spend together.
Even if you don't get home from work until fairly late at night, try to spend the rest of the evening in meaningful conversation with your child.

* Know what your kids are watching on television and searching for on the computer.

* Establish clear rules about drug use. Tell your kids you expect them not to use drugs-ever.

Dr. Cunningham adds, "the more parents and communities do to ensure that children and adolescents are involved in worthwhile activities, the better we can prevent most kinds of youth behavior problems."

Source: http://www.recoverybroadcastnetwork.net/

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  • Yes listen to the creepy robot lock your kids inside and block every channel but PBS or mercilessly stalk them at all times at the critical time of development were they begin to become Socially developed to breed ether resentment with or with out recless behavior and or anti social behave your in your on going fear of wreck less teens hoped op on " drugs" roming the streets

  • uncannny valllley

  • this is how to raise kids who go nuts with binge drinking and drugs the moment they step into college because they never got the chance to experiment and be introduced to it. and no hanging out with friends? thats a great way to make your kids resent you. and who wants to watch an animated avatar announcing a written article in a monotone robot voice? sorry man- not for youtube. get a webcam and be your own anchor.

  • worst video ever!

  • well, that was really shit

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