It’s a rite of passage for many teens… getting that first after-school job. But those hours spent at work, and the extra cash… could lead to problems both in and out of the classroom .
Not for 17-year-old Adam Shapiro, though…
“Are you studying the rest of the week?” his mom, Karen, asks him,
“Yeah,” says Adam.
For now, the high school senior will stay home and study. And any part-time job will have to wait.
What has Adam done so far, in the way of employment?
“I have worked at my synagogue… like three hours a week probably on a Sunday. I was assistant teacher. I’ve ref’d soccer before.”
But as Karen Shapiro explains, “The number one priority for us is his studies. So, if he wanted to work and make extra money that was great, as long as it did not interfere with his studies.”
In fact, a new Temple University study found teens who work more than 10 hours a week admitted to cheating more and take less challenging classes.
On top of that, those teens are 30 percent more likely to use drugs or alcohol.
“They end up experimenting in such a way that the use of that the use of that income is not really going toward beneficial things for them,” explains Dr. Richard Winer, a psychiatrist.
He says parents need to keep a close eye on where the money is going, and how the job is affecting their child. “Their sleep patterns, their eating patterns, their social skills among peers as well as family member… if there’s a distinct change that’s taken place then it’s probably worth looking into to that, because that might be kind of a warning sign.”
Finally, he says kids will do better off if they take a job for the experience, not just the cash.
“If you enjoy your work, it won’t feel that taxing to you,” he says, “and [it] probably will have less likelihood of being an impediment to your academic work as a teen or as a college student.”
Adam, who already has been accepted to college early admission, says that’s exactly what happened to him. “I ref soccer, and I enjoy, I love sports… so, I try to find a happy medium in between working, getting paid… and doing something I love.”
Colleges are starting to react to potential distractions of part time jobs. Brown university in Rhode Island dropped its work-study program for freshman, because administrators there say the work would be too distracting. The university instead will give grants to some students who previously qualified for the work-study program.
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