Baby Boomers' Babies - Teen pregnancy on the incline a growing trend.
It has been some time now that the “Baby Boom” generation has been conceived, most of this 400 thousand plus generation will be retiring within the next few years. But what of the new baby boomers. A rise in teen pregnancy after a 15 year decline has the attention of some of the nations brightest minds.
According to the NCHS pregnancy in teens was on a steady decline for 15 years before a dramatic three to five percent national raise in 2006/2007.[1] Although this may not seem like a big increase the numbers translate to about three in every ten teenage girls becoming pregnant at least once before they are twenty years of age, And repeat pregnancies may account for as high as twenty percent in some parts of the country.[1] The National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy claims, babies born to teens in 2004 will cost taxpayers $9.1 billion over time. This figure includes increased costs to public assistance, public sector health care, child welfare and state prisons and lower taxes paid by teen parents and their children over their lifetimes.[2] Although the difference of birth rate varies for different ethnicities the NCHS rules out race as a potential factor in national birth rate.[1]
The causes for such increases over the past two years range in theories widely from restriction of funding for certain types of sexual education, to religious background and belief, even personal need to feel accepted in society by older peers. But most of the date collected by various organizations points mostly to the fact that no highly effective sex education or HIV prevention education program is eligible for federal funding because mandates prohibit educating teenagers about the benefits of condoms and contraception.[3] The government will only allow funding for abstinent until marriage sexual education programs which according to the researchers at Columbia University “virginity pledge programs increase pledge-takers’ risk for sexually transmitted infections and pregnancy. The study concluded that 88 percent of pledge-takers initiated sex prior to marriage even though some delayed sex for a while. Rates of sexually transmitted infections among pledge takers and non-pledge takers were similar, even though pledge-takers initiated sex later. Pledge-takers were less likely to seek STI testing and less likely to use contraception when they did have sex”.[4][5] Concluding the main cause of birth increase in teenagers is the lack of knowledge about contraception and condoms. The teens are less informed about “safe sex” and more informed about being morally correct and given basically two options; be abstinent until someone will tell them the truth, Or learn on there own. And that is mostly the problem, we have to many young explorers taking adventures with no navigation system and unfortunately they don’t realize how far off\ they really are until they get a flat. Unfortunately the government doesn’t only have difficulty with the problems of the future but apparently are unable to read well documented statistics, In one recent study 94 percent of adults and 93 percent of parents said that sex education should cover contraception. Only 15 percent of Americans wanted abstinence-only education taught in the classroom.[6] It just makes more sense to educate instead of attempting to refrain.
Having a baby is not the only repercussion that will become of teenage mommies. Each year these babies cost the tax payers over nine billion dollars. Most teenage parents can not afford a child because they are simply children themselves, eighty percent of teenage mothers end up on welfare. Most teenage mothers do not finish high school. Only one third of them will finish high school and only one and one half percent will obtain a college degree by age 30. Children birthed by teenage mothers are more likely to do poorly in school and be abused or neglected, boys are thirteen percent more likely to end up in prison while girls are twenty-two percent more likely to become teenage mothers themselves.[1] And so on this cycle will continue unless the education system explains the “rules and regulations” of sex, in place of telling kids just not to do it.
Sources
1. National Center for Health Statistics, National Vital Statistics Report, Births: Final Data for 2006, January 2009. Web. Dec.5.2009
2. National Center for Health Statistics, National Vital Statistics Report, Births: Final Data for 2006, January 2009; National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy, By the Numbers: The Public Costs of Teen Childbearing, 2006.Web.Dec.5.20009
3. American Foundation for AIDS Research. Assessing the Efficacy of Abstinence-Only Programs for HIV Prevention among Young People. [Issue Brief, no. 2] Washington, DC: Author, 2005. Web. Dec.5.2009
4. Brückner H, Bearman P. After the promise: the STD consequences of adolescent virginity pledges. Journal of Adolescent Health 2005; 36:271-278.
5.Bearman PS, Brückner H. Promising the future: virginity pledges and first intercourse. American Journal of Sociology 2001; 106(4):859-912.
6.National Public Radio et al. Sex Education in America: NPR/Kaiser/Kennedy School Poll. Menlo Park, CA: Kaiser, 2004. Web.Dec.5.2009
Post Write.
Im not sure how i feel about this paper so far, its unfinished and it isnt as long as i would like it to be.
I think i want to add another minor cause and a few more effects and lenghten the paper up a bit
Do you think ive responded well to this assignment? Is teen pregnancy clearly defined as a trend in this piece. Is there enough information and statistics to back up my allegations?
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1.) This assignment is asking Josh to write a factual article discussing a trend somewhere in the general public, and analyze the causes and effects of said trend. He is to use several scholarly articles and/or factual sources to help him document this trend and draw conclusions about it.
ReplyDelete2.) Joshua does a good job in getting the meat of the story taken care of. His thesis is clearly stated at the end of the very first paragraph, and he follows it directly with a solid piece of data that provides evidence for this thesis. There is a proper analysis of cause and effect, and good use of signal phrases such as “so and so claims” and “according to research at Columbia University”. I also like his concluding sentence, you can certainly determine his bias from it, and it implies what the solution to this problem trend might be.
3.) I also really like the analogy he uses in the the end of the third paragraph, about the navigation system and flat tire, it’s very creative and helps to drive his point home. It also serves as kind of a little summary of all the information that he presents in that huge paragraph, and puts it in terms that are easy to understand.
4.) The third paragraph is a bit long, perhaps it could be broken up a little to improve the readability and make it less intimidating to the reader, as well as sort through some of the ideas presented there and put more emphasis on their importance.
Adam Rusin Peer Review
ReplyDelete1. This assignment was to find a trend with some interest for us. Take that trend, along with 2 scholarly articles, analyze the trend, Shopw examples of the trend, show some causes and some effects of it. We were asked to use a database to find our articles.
2. Josh did a good job hitting this essay on the nose. He did a great job making his thesis clear and right at the beginning of his piece. He went through and gave some great examples with evidence to back it up. He went through and gave some causes and effects of the trend, he basically did the essay in the exact format we were asked, his comclusion was strong and restated his thoughts and facts. He nailed it.
3. Not much work needs to be done on this piece, I think its his best piece so far, The flow of the paper was clear,direct and just overall great. He did his paper to the tee of how we were supposed to set it up, great job.
4. what are some causes of a baby boom
Why is our generation so heavy into teen pregnancy