The document discusses adolescent brain development and provides strategies for parenting teenagers. It explains that the teenage brain is still developing key regions related to decision-making and emotional regulation. Specifically, the prefrontal cortex develops last and the amygdala is more active due to hormones, making teenagers more susceptible to emotional decisions and peer pressure. The document recommends exercising, sleeping, eating healthy, and reducing stress to support brain development. It also suggests openly communicating values and decisions with teenagers, giving them autonomy appropriately, and helping them learn to reason through situations.
Hį»C Tį»T TIįŗ¾NG ANH 11 THEO CHĘÆĘ NG TRĆNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ÄĆP ĆN CHI TIįŗ¾T - Cįŗ¢ NÄ...
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Crane Country Day School Parenting with Teen Brain in Mind
1. Crane Country Day School
Rosetta Eun Ryong Lee
Seattle Girlsā School
Parenting with
Adolescent Brains in Mind
Rosetta Eun Ryong Lee (http://tiny.cc/rosettalee)
4. Adolescence
āTeenagers [are like] people
constantly on LSD. People on
acid are intense, changeable,
internal, often cryptic and
uncommunicative, and, of course,
dealing with a different reality.ā
Mary Pipher, Reviving Ophelia
Rosetta Eun Ryong Lee (http://tiny.cc/rosettalee)
6. Developmental Characteristics of
Adolescence
ā¢ Identity Formation
ā¢ Tenuous Sense of Self
ā¢ Self-Regulation
ā¢ Imaginary Audience
ā¢ Development of Self-Esteem
ā¢ Adolescent Egocentricism
ā¢ Importance of Peer Relationships
ā¢ Formation of Groups, Crowds and Cliques
Rosetta Eun Ryong Lee (http://tiny.cc/rosettalee)
7. Teen Behaviors:
Through the Lens of Autonomy
ā¢ Risk Taking
ā¢ Lies
ā¢ Boredom
ā¢ Influence of Peers
ā¢ Adolescent Decision
Making
ā¢ Arguing with
Authority
Rosetta Eun Ryong Lee (http://tiny.cc/rosettalee)
8. At My Houseā¦
How do you see your
childrenās adolescence
manifest itself in their
interactions and behavior?
How do you support them?
Rosetta Eun Ryong Lee (http://tiny.cc/rosettalee)
9. Rosetta Eun Ryong Lee (http://tiny.cc/rosettalee)
Brain Science Crash Course
10. Stuff We Kinda Knew Alreadyā¦
With a Twist
ā¢ Exercise
ā¢ Sleep
ā¢ Nutrition
ā¢ Stress
Rosetta Eun Ryong Lee (http://tiny.cc/rosettalee)
11. Exercise
ā¢ 30 minutes of aerobic activity
ā¢ 2-3 times a week
Rosetta Eun Ryong Lee (http://tiny.cc/rosettalee)
12. Sleep
ā¢ Effects of sleep much more pronounced
in children and adolescents
ā¢ Chronotypes (morning/night
people)
ā¢ The Nap Zone
ā¢ Dangers of Sleep
Deprivation
Rosetta Eun Ryong Lee (http://tiny.cc/rosettalee)
13. Nutrition
ā¢ Goldilocks Food Habits
ā¢ Good Food = Well
Fueled Brains
ā¢ Bad Food = Poor
Learning
Rosetta Eun Ryong Lee (http://tiny.cc/rosettalee)
14. ā¢ 30 Second Stress
ā¢ Chronic Stress = Bad
Learning
ā¢ Happy Home =
Academic Success
Stress
Rosetta Eun Ryong Lee (http://tiny.cc/rosettalee)
15. Adolescent Brain Research
ā¢ Brain keeps growing and developing to age 25!
ā¢ Teen brain is a ālate childhood brainā
ā Capacity to learn things quickly
ā Connections between different sections of the
brain arenāt fully developed yet.
ā Brain is pruning and re-wiring neurons during
this time
ā Amygdala is getting hyper triggered by
hormones
ā Prefrontal Cortex (frontal lobe) is last place for
connections to develop.
Rosetta Eun Ryong Lee (http://tiny.cc/rosettalee)
16. The Two Brains
ā¢ Rational Brain and
Emotional Brain
ā¢ Both Valuable,
Both Able to
Mislead
ā¢ Emotional
Systemās
Evolutionary
Origin
Epstein. Stanford Social Innovation Review. Spring 2006.
Rosetta Eun Ryong Lee (http://tiny.cc/rosettalee)
17. The Emotional Brain
ā¢ Pattern Recognition
Without Conscious
Awareness
ā¢ Motivates Behavior
Change Through
Feelings, Autonomic
Responses
ā¢ First Impression
ā¢ Thin Slice of
Information
Gladwell. Blink. NY: Little, Brown & Co. 2005.
Rosetta Eun Ryong Lee (http://tiny.cc/rosettalee)
18. Pre-Frontal Cortex: PFC
ā¢ High level reasoning
ā¢ Decision-making
ā¢ Impulse control
ā¢ Assessment of consequences
ā¢ Planning, strategizing, organizing
ā¢ Inhibiting inappropriate behavior
ā¢ Adjusting behavior when the
situation changes
ā¢ Setting priorities
ā¢ Estimating and understanding
probabilities
Rosetta Eun Ryong Lee (http://tiny.cc/rosettalee)
19. The Problem
ā¢ Cognitive abilities ļ¹
performance
ā¢ Analysis ļ¹ primary
mode of decision-
making
ā¢ Competence ļ¹ use
of that competence
Kluczynski. Child Development 2001; 72:844
Rosetta Eun Ryong Lee (http://tiny.cc/rosettalee)
20. PFC vs Amygdala
PFC:
Situation ļ®
Assess ļ®
Plan
Amygdala:
Situation ļ®
Emotion/Feeling ļ®
React
Rosetta Eun Ryong Lee (http://tiny.cc/rosettalee)
21. Peer Pressure
ā¢ Computerized risk-taking
tests done alone and while
watched by friends:
ā Adults: peers have no effect
ā Adolescents: peers doubles
the number of risks taken
ā¢ Brain scans at the same
time suggest presence of
friends activates a different
part of the brain
Laurence Steinberg
Rosetta Eun Ryong Lee (http://tiny.cc/rosettalee)
22. Implications
ā¢ They ARE capable
ā¢ Circumstances matter
ā¢ Social + Emotional +
Intellectual = Decision
ā¢ Amygdala first, PFC
last
ā¢ Gut response first,
reason second
Rosetta Eun Ryong Lee (http://tiny.cc/rosettalee)
23. Taking it All In
What information was
new, interesting,
surprising,
informative, etc.? Are
you seeing some
adolescent behaviors
in your children in a
new light?
Rosetta Eun Ryong Lee (http://tiny.cc/rosettalee)
25. Living Out Loud
ā¢ Talk about your day and
show interest in theirs
ā¢ Talk positively and
realistically about yourself
ā¢ Make mistakes out loud
ā¢ Tell your stories
ā¢ Emote out loud
ā¢ Reason out loud
ā¢ Make your values clear
ā¢ Walk your talk
ā¢ Listen, listen, listen
Rosetta Eun Ryong Lee (http://tiny.cc/rosettalee)
26. Respecting Them
ā¢ Involve them in decision-making
ā¢ Explain the āwhyā
ā¢ Recognize their developing
capacity
ā¢ Recognize that, even at 17, their
decision-making may be different
than āmatureā decision-making
ā¢ Recognize situations that
influence rational decision-making
ā¢ Limits are necessary
ā¢ Some autonomy is necessary
ā¢ Help them reason through
decisions
Rosetta Eun Ryong Lee (http://tiny.cc/rosettalee)
28. Presenter Information
Rosetta Eun Ryong Lee
6th Faculty and
Professional Outreach
Seattle Girlsā School
2706 S Jackson Street
Seattle WA 98144
(206) 805-6562
rlee@seattlegirlsschool.org
http://tiny.cc/rosettalee
Rosetta Eun Ryong Lee (http://tiny.cc/rosettalee)