Pubdate: Sat, 21 Dec 2002 Source: Sun News (Myrtle Beach, SC) Copyright: 2002 Sun Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/mld/sunnews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/987 Author: Jane Eisner, Philadelphia Inquirer TEENAGERS LATEST NEWS: KIDS BEHAVING BETTER The latest news about smoking, drinking and the use of illegal drugs among teenagers is actually good news. Perhaps that's why it got so little attention. The highly reputable annual survey conducted by the University of Michigan's Institute for Social Research, released Monday, should have received sustained civic applause for what it showed: The use of tobacco, alcohol and illegal drugs fell simultaneously among eighth-, 10th- and 12th-graders for the first time since the Monitoring the Future project began tracking teenage substance abuse in 1975. Even the use of Ecstasy declined after several years of surging popularity. The truth can't be avoided. American teens are no longer Young Men (and Women) Behaving Badly. Add those facts to a few other remarkable trends in national teen culture. Teen birthrates, which began dropping in the late 1980s, are continuing to plummet. The teen abortion rate is also dropping. And the number of high-school students who say they've never had sexual intercourse rose by almost 10 percent between 1991 and 2001. This is not supposed to happen in the age of Britney, Eminem and Columbine. Teenagers are supposed to be sullen, promiscuous, alienated - - or a combination of all three. In "The Rise & Fall of the American Teenager," Thomas Hine writes: "The mere presence of teenagers threatens us ... and the degree to which adults fear them as a group has unquestionably increased. "The result has been the enactment of laws that deny them, as minors, freedom to move, gather and express themselves and of other laws that require states to prosecute them as adults for a wide variety of crimes." Why this yawning disconnect? Partly because today's teenagers spend less time in the company of parents and other adults. They're living on Mars while Mom and Dad are on Pluto, and everyone's just too busy and stressed to figure out how to occupy the same planet, let alone communicate in the same language. Besides, it's much easier to demonize the kid with the spiky purple hair than to try to understand him. The latest avalanche of unexpectedly good news can't be traced to a single magic factor, but scientific studies do point to one thing: Teenagers will change their behaviors when they perceive the risk of continuing is too steep. That, researchers believe, is what propelled the stunning and welcome decrease in cigarette smoking. Even the percentage of teens who prefer to date nonsmokers is increasing. Other recent surveys have shown that teens disapprove of casual sex more than they did a decade ago - an attitude adjustment propelled by fear of AIDS and sexually transmitted disease, but also by public exhortations toward abstinence, privacy and restraint. "It signals a deep, broad and profound change," says Sarah Brown, director of the National Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy. "We should give a celebration party for all teens in America to say, 'You're doing the right thing, so don't stop!'" We should celebrate these achievements - and then, after the party is over, concentrate on a little attitude-adjustment of our own. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake