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Teenagers Learn What They Live : Parenting to Inspire Integrity & Independence

AUTHOR: Dorothy Law Nolte, Rachel Harris
ISBN: 0761121382

SHORT DESCRIPTION: The authors of the bestselling "Children Learn What They Live" bring their unique perspective to families with adolescents, addressing the responsibilities of maturity, body image and the allure of drugs, guiding parents to communicate with their...

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Parenting Teenagers
         Editorial Review

Teenagers Learn What They Live : Parenting to Inspire Integrity & Independence
- Book Review,
by Dorothy Law Nolte, Rachel Harris

From Publishers Weekly
Following up on their first parenting manual (Children Learn What They Live) Nolte, a teacher, and Harris, a psychotherapist, here turn their attention to the difficult years of adolescence. Like the earlier work, each chapter is inspired by a line in a poem written by Nolte ("If teenagers live with failure they learn to give up"; "If teenagers live with too many rules, they learn to get around them"). The same philosophy-that teens, as well as children, are guided more by what parents do than by what they say-also holds sway here. Many examples of how a good parent-child relationship fostered in the early years will help teens better navigate the tricky waters of adolescence are provided. According to the authors, parents should set standards of behavior but recognize that they cannot and should not always control the behavior of their children. Decision-making is also an activity that teens need to learn by trial and error. When Morgan decided to skip her senior year of high school and go to college under an early admission program, her parents, although against the plan, chose not to overprotect their daughter. After a miserable freshman year, Morgan, who was academically but not socially prepared for college, learned from her mistake and also profited from the many supportive telephone conversations she had with her parents during this difficult time. A practical and inspirational guide for parents. Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
This follow-up to Children Learn What They Live (1998) offers practical advice based on the fact that youth pay more attention to what parents do than what they say. For example, if teens live with pressures they witness in their parents' lives, they will be stressed with the pressures of their own lives. Nolte and Harris suggest that parents need to model balance in what they do to teach the same to their teens; if teens live with openness, trust, discipline, and other virtues, they will learn to develop those virtues. Nolte and Harris use case studies of families to illustrate how to handle challenges, including rules, discipline, sex, grades, health, and other issues, in balancing the increasing independence of teens even as they continue to need the guidance of their parents. This helpful resource also provides advice on evaluating parent-child relationships and how to model the kind of behavior parents would like their teens to develop. Vanessa Bush
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Book Description
Parenting by example. Using the simple, powerful message that turned Children Learn What They Live into an international bestseller with over 1.5 million copies in print, Drs. Dorothy Law Nolte and Rachel Harris bring their unique perspective to families with adolescents. Structured, like the first book, around an inspirational poem, Teenagers Learn What They Live addresses the turbulent teenage years, when a stew of hormones, pressures, and temptations makes for such extreme challenges for parents and _children. Teenagers addresses popularity and peer pressure ("If teenagers live with rejection, they learn to feel lost"); the responsibilities of maturity ("If teenagers live with too many rules, they learn how to get around them./ If teenagers live with too few rules, they learn to ignore the needs of others"); body image and the allure of cigarettes, drugs, and alcohol ("If teenagers live with healthy habits, they learn to be kind to their bodies"). Central to the book are ways for parents to communicate with their teenage children-including how to deal with being "tuned out" and when to start the conversation again-and how to strike the right balance between holding on and accepting a teen's growing independence. Hundreds of examples of parent-child interactions cover everything from the all-night graduation party to problems of sexual identity, providing great guidance as well as effective conversation starters.

About the Author
DOROTHY LAW NOLTE, PHD. is a lifelong teacher and lecturer on family life education, and is the author of the poem "Children Learn What They Live," which has been translated into 20 languages and is used the world over by parents and educators. The mother of three, grandmother of three, and great grandmother of five, she lives and works in southern California. RACHEL HARRIS, PH.D., is a psychotherapist who completed postgraduate training in family therapy and parenting education. She lives in Princeton, New Jersey. Dorothy and Rachel have known each other for over 30 years, and between them have raised four teenagers.


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         Book Review

Teenagers Learn What They Live : Parenting to Inspire Integrity & Independence
- Book Reviews,
by Dorothy Law Nolte, Rachel Harris

Teenagers Learn What They Live: Parenting to Inspire Integrity and Independence

FROM THE PUBLISHER

The adolescent years can be as challenging for parents as they are for kids. But by reinforcing the fundamental truths of parenting -- that parents need to teach by example and stay deeply involved -- Teenagers Learn What They Live is a bedrock of value, insight, and common sense. Tackling issues of popularity and peer pressure, the responsibilities of maturity, body image, moodiness, sexuality, and the allure of dangerous behaviors, this book shows how to keep those important lines of communication open, no matter how tough it gets.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

Following up on their first parenting manual (Children Learn What They Live) Nolte, a teacher, and Harris, a psychotherapist, here turn their attention to the difficult years of adolescence. Like the earlier work, each chapter is inspired by a line in a poem written by Nolte ("If teenagers live with failure they learn to give up"; "If teenagers live with too many rules, they learn to get around them"). The same philosophy-that teens, as well as children, are guided more by what parents do than by what they say-also holds sway here. Many examples of how a good parent-child relationship fostered in the early years will help teens better navigate the tricky waters of adolescence are provided. According to the authors, parents should set standards of behavior but recognize that they cannot and should not always control the behavior of their children. Decision-making is also an activity that teens need to learn by trial and error. When Morgan decided to skip her senior year of high school and go to college under an early admission program, her parents, although against the plan, chose not to overprotect their daughter. After a miserable freshman year, Morgan, who was academically but not socially prepared for college, learned from her mistake and also profited from the many supportive telephone conversations she had with her parents during this difficult time. A practical and inspirational guide for parents. (Jan.)


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