Newsletter #1 for ideas (text) Easy Ways to Build Assets for and with Your Child pare t n s (return link to contents) Return to Table of Contents ASSETS: 40 Keys to Effective Parenting Assets are 40 key building blocks of devel- opment that help youth grow up healthy. The more assets youth have, the more likely they are to succeed. What Are Assets? Assets are 40 values, experiences, and qualities that help kids succeed. * Based on Search Institute surveys of 217,277 6th- to 12th-grade youth throughout the United States during the 1999–2000 school year.. FAST FACTS 56% of youthsurveyed bySearchInstitute havejust 20 orfewer of theseassets in theirlives.* Powerful Parenting: The Asset-Building Way I I t’s easy to get scared as a parent. Watching the news, we see crime, drinking and driving, teen pregnancy, gang warfare, suicide. We wonder what’s going to happen to our children. In our fear, we may end up scaring our kids so that they live in fear as well. Or, we may look the other way, thinking that these things would never affect our families. Whatever the approach, most parents feel uncertain at times. We would like to know the secrets of healthy parenting in a world that often seems very unhealthy. The idea of “developmental assets,” introduced by Search Institute in Minneapolis, gives a new sense of hope and practical direction for parents. Researchers at Search Search Institute has identified eight typesof assets that are crucial for helpingyoung people grow up healthy: How to Start • Supporting and loving your child. • Empowering your child. • Setting clear and realistic boundaries and expectations. • Helping your child use her or his time in meaningful, constructive ways. • Encouraging your child to develop a lifetime commitment to learning. • Instilling in your child positive values. Institute have identified 40 assets that have a powerful, positive impact on young people. Children and teenagers who have a lot of assets get involved in very few risky behaviors—the kinds of problems we worry about. And when young people have a lot of assets, they are much more likely to do the positive things we value. difference. By up happy, healthy, and responsible. newsletter will explain further and give practical information on each asset. Assets do make a incorporating them into your parenting, you can help your child grow Future issues of this • Developing social competencies in your child. • Encouraging your child to form a positive identity. Each area involves several specific assets. See the “asset quiz” for a list of all 40. (text) Next page Assets: How Does Your Child Rate? T T ake this quiz to see how many assets you think _____ 19. My child spends one or more hours per week in your child has. Check each statement you feel is true. activities in a religious institution. _____ 20. My child is out with friends “with nothing special to do” two or fewer nights per week. _____ 1. My child receives a lot of love and support from family _____ 21. My child wants to do well in school. members. _____ 22. My child likes to learn new things. _____ 2. My child and I communicate positively, and my child is _____ 23. My child does at least one hour of homework every willing to seek me out for advice and support. school day. _____ 3. My child receives support from three or more non _____ 24. My child cares about her or his school. parent adults. _____ 25. My child reads for pleasure three or more hours per _____ 4. My child has neighbors that encourage and support her week. or him. . _____ 26. My child places high value on helping other people. _____ 5. My child’s school provides a caring, encouraging _____ 27. My child wants to promote equality and reduce hunger environment. and poverty. _____ 6. I am actively involved in helping my child succeed in _____ 28. My child acts on convictions and stands up for her or his school. beliefs. _____ 7. My child feels that adults in the community value youth _____ 29. My child tells the truth even when it is not easy. and children. _____ 30. My child accepts and takes personal responsibility. _____ 8. My child is given useful roles in the community. _____ 31. My child believes it is important not to be sexually active _____ 9. My child serves in the community one hour or more per nor to use alcohol or other drugs. week. _____ 32. My child knows how to plan ahead and make choices. _____ 10. My child feels safe at home, at school, and in the _____ 33. My child is good at making and keeping friends. neighborhood. _____ 34. My child has knowledge of and comfort with people of _____ 11. Our family has clear rules and consequences, and different cultural, racial, and ethnic backgrounds. monitors our child’s whereabouts. _____ 35. My child can resist negative peer pressure and _____ 12. My child’s school provides clear rules and consequences. dangerous situations. _____ 13. Our neighbors take responsibility for monitoring my _____ 36. My child seeks to resolve conflict nonviolently. child’s behavior. _____ 37. My child feels he or she has control over things that _____ 14. I and other adults model positive, responsible behavior. happen to her or him. _____ 15. My child’s best friends model responsible behavior. _____ 38. My child feels good about her- or himself. _____ 16. I and my child’s teachers encourage my child to do well. _____ 39. My child believes that her or his life has a purpose. _____ 17. My child spends three or more hours per week in _____ 40. My child feels positive about her or his personal future. lessons or practice in music, theater, or other arts. _____ 18. My child spends three or more hours per week in sports, Scoring: Give yourself one point for each “true.” Total up the clubs, or organizations at school and/or in the number of points. This is the number of assets you think your community. child has. Now ask your child how he or she would answer. This checklist is an educational, awareness-raising tool. It is not intended nor appropriate as a scientific measurement of developmental assets of individuals. iNaL WoRD “Like a dream catcher, assets are the supporting threads in a young person’s life that can keep away harm and invite goodness.”—Helping Kids Succeed—Alaskan Style This newsletter and other asset resources are produced by Search Institute, www.search-institute.org; 800-888-7828. Copyright © 1997, 2003, 2005 by Search Institute. Major support for Search Institute’s Healthy Communities • Healthy Youth initiative is provided by Thrivent Financial for Lutherans. (text) Previous page (text)