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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 9 page paper discussing how work experience can affect adolescent workers. In many developed nations, adolescents choose to work at wage-earning jobs to contribute to further education, the ability to have a higher level of discretionary funds available or even to support a young family that may or may not have been planned. Youth workers can have a wide variety of reasons for working at wage-earning jobs, which in turn provide significant learning opportunities. The youth worker finds opportunity not only to learn skills to build on, s/he also has the opportunity to learn much about himself and to more closely define the individual that s/he is. The paper explores Maslow’s hierarchy of needs and Erikson’s expansion on it to determine that it is the third level, that of belonging, that can be of greatest obvious beneficial effect for teens. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
9 pages (~225 words per page)
File: CC6_KSmgmtYouthMas.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
a perfect world, adolescents are not required to work to support anyone, including themselves. Not everyone lives in such a "perfect" world, however, and youth in all types of
economies, developed and otherwise, find that they are obliged to go to work to help support the family. In many developed nations, adolescents
choose to work at wage-earning jobs to contribute to further education, the ability to have a higher level of discretionary funds available or even to support a young family that
may or may not have been planned. Youth workers can have a wide variety of reasons for working at wage-earning jobs, which in turn provide significant learning opportunities.
The youth worker finds opportunity not only to learn skills to build on, s/he also has the opportunity to learn much about himself and to more closely define the individual
that s/he is. Irelands Economic Growth Sleepy, agricultural Ireland has taken off in economic growth in recent years that surprised many of the
worlds economists. Ireland always has been respected for its educational base, but its economy was not one to which multinational organizations or other nations flocked to improve their own
economic standing. All that began changing in the early 1990s, with the result that between 1995 and 1999 - years in which many other European nations suffered disappointing rates
of growth - the Irish economy averaged an annual growth rate of more than 9 percent (Ireland, 2002). The makeup of the economy
changed during that time as well. "Agriculture, once the most important sector, is now dwarfed by industry, which accounts for 39% of GDP and about 80% of exports and
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