"Excellent advice on dealing with young people. I wish I’d had this book
when my own children were adolescents!"
—Patricia Wolfe, International Educational Consultant, Mind Matters, Inc.
"Written in a reader-friendly manner, the book thoughtfully examines the
transition period from childhood to adulthood and combines scholarship from
psychology, education, and neuroscience. Loved the graphics!"
—Sheryl Feinstein, Associate Professor, Augustana College
"Readers will leave this book with a sense of calmness about living or
working with adolescents."
—Bob Patterson, Training Manager, Discovery Education
How the teenage brain thinks, feels, learns, and changes on its journey
to adulthood.
In this enlightening volume, expert educator Robert Sylvester explains how
adults can better understand teenagers through an engaging discussion of the
adolescent brain. Readers will learn how to:
- Mentor adolescents rather than attempt to manage and control them
- Nurture creativity, imagination, and individuality
- Understand such critical issues as sexuality and bonding,productivity
and vocation, morality and ethics, risk and security, technology and drugs,
collaboration and autonomy, and more
Familiar examples and nontechnical language make this an accessible resource
appropriate for rewarding classroom or family discussion.