Youth parallel culture
BreakPoint with Charles
Colson
Commentary #010314 - 03/14/2001
A World of Their
Own: Santee & The Autonomous Teen
On
Tuesday of last week, Charles "Andy" Williams, fifteen, walked out of
the bathroom in his Santee, California high school with a smile on his face and
a ..22 in his hand. Within a few minutes, two kids were dead and another
thirteen were wounded.
But
this was only the most recent in a series of seemingly inexplicable shootings in
American high schools. As with the shootings in Littleton, Paducah, and Ashland,
people are asking how this could have happened.
Hours
after the shooting we learned that Williams had been the object of the kind of
bullying and harassment that is typical in American high schools. Classmates
told reporters that he'd been called a "dork," a "freak,"
and a "nerd."
If
you're wondering "Where were the adults?" it's clear you don't know
how most American teenagers are growing up today. American teenagers operate in
what has been called a "parallel culture" that operates free of adult
interference.
As
Leon Botstein, the president of Bard College, wrote in the New York Times,
American high schools are the site of something unique in American society:
"a gang in which individuals of the same age group define each other's
world." This definition includes the imposition of standards that have no
relationship to what's needed for success in the real world.
Instead
of stepping in and challenging the false values, which are being imposed by
elite cliques, or even challenging the kind of cruelty endured by kids like Andy
Williams, teachers and administrators adopt a hands-off approach. It's called
"non-directed teaching," and kids are allowed to follow their own
rules wherever it may take them.
And
where do they get these rules? From themselves, with help from the corporations
who covet their business. Teenagers are a 150-billion dollar per year market!
Companies study today's teenagers to see what they want, and then programmers
present kids with an often cruder and more sexualized version of themselves --
always stressing that kids should make their own decisions.
Kids
then imitate this "version of themselves," and the result is what NYU
professor Douglas Rushkoff calls a "feedback loop." This loop, which
is completely adult-free, both validates and shapes teenagers' ideas about right
and wrong, what's important and what isn't.
So
we've got American kids operating from an artificial set of rules unrelated to
real life; they're going to schools where adults don't question those rules,
watching media that validates those rules, and being wooed by advertisers who
tell them how insightful they really are. Worst of all, their parents are
complicit in the creation of the parallel culture.
Whether
it's because of a lack of time, or a desire not to "repress" their
children, American parents have adopted a hands-off approach to parenting.
Instead of direct supervision they get what's called "guilt money" --
money given in lieu of real parental involvement. The lack of supervision and
the money reinforce the parallel culture. It's created a creature I call the
"autonomous teenager."
Well,
the autonomous teenager has got to go if we're to avoid horrors like Santee.
What we've forgotten is that we are still dealing with children here. And
children need adult supervision. Until we remember the seemingly obvious, we are
destined to continue asking ourselves "how this could have happened,"
and never getting the right answer.
For
further reference:
Botstein, Leon. "Let Teen-Agers Try Adulthood." New York Times, 17 May
1999.
Rosenfeld, Megan. "'Merchants of Cool,' Hot on Teens' Trail."
Washington Post, 27 February 2001.