Take-Home Skill: Teens and Adults Collaborating to Uplift the Community
Parents/caregivers and their teens reflect on tips to collaborate across generations to overcome community challenges.
Parents/caregivers and their teens reflect on tips to collaborate across generations to overcome community challenges.
Youth will:
Take a moment to reflect on some of your experiences, if any, partnering with adults on a shared goal when you were a teen.
If you didn’t have such experiences, what kinds do you wish you had? Is there something you did with a teacher, a coach, or someone else that could count as working together on something important to you?
Overview: connected and supported in their communities, which in turn, can create important opportunities for them to take action to pursue justice for a community cause that matters to them. Teens who see that their communities are places where younger and older people collaborate respectfully on solving community challenges can nurture a strong commitment to social responsibility in teens early on.
Activity:
Find, create, and/or actively participate in activities in your community that bring together teens and adults across generations as partners to solve community challenges. Help your teen explore opportunities to become involved in building or participating in community intergenerational partnerships.
Talk with your teen about these five important ways that intergenerational partnerships work best.
Research finds that youth-adult partnerships can nurture healthy development, civic engagement, and positive changes in communities. Studies have found that these partnerships are defined by multiple relationships between teens and adults, a democratic approach to group deliberation and action, an ongoing time period, and shared work. What’s more, researchers explain authentic decision-making, natural mentors, reciprocal activity, and community connectedness are essential characteristics in these partnerships.
As teens are growing in their sense of independence, being active members in their communities to promote positive changes can help them identify their sense of purpose in life. Teens want their voices heard and to contribute to something bigger than themselves. They can be uplifted by collaborating with adults who help them look to the future and connect them to the broader community.
Researchers have questioned an approach in our society that has aimed to “protect” teens, but has led to young people being cut off from opportunities to make decisions and take collective action within their communities. “The cost of not doing so [involving young people in shared decision-making] will likely come back to haunt us as a civil society and a golden opportunity to move toward a fuller and more inclusive wisdom will have been missed,” explained Mary McAlesse, president of UNESCO.
Youth-adult partnerships can be an effective tool in preventing teens from being excluded from being important contributing members of society. Nurturing these types of intergenerational relationships can give teens opportunities to grow their social connections, promote civic development and engagement, and learn important community-building and problem-solving skills.
Zeldin, S., Christens, B. D., & Powers, J. L. (2013). The psychology and practice of youth-adult partnership: Bridging generations for youth development and community change. American Journal of Community Psychology, 51, 385-397. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10464-012-9558-y
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