Imagine this, it’s 10:30 p.m. and you are walking down the street when a cop approaches you. The next thing you know you’re in big trouble for being on the streets after 10:00 p.m. Don’t like the sound of that do you? My city council is considering a curfew that would make it illegal for teenagers to be out on the streets after 10:00 p.m. on weekdays and after midnight on weekends. I disagree with this consideration because teenagers may have to work late, they could be in danger, or there could be an emergency.
First of all, some teenagers end up working late at night and can’t help that. Working night shift causes teenagers to get home late. Most teenagers don’t have a car, so they walk to and from work. If there is a curfew it will get the
Curfews have been the bane of many young people's lives for generations upon generations. Unlike this instance, though, these limitations were usually set by parents or other guardians. I realize that curfews decided on by cities as a whole also stem from the same place that those set by parents are, that is, in the interest of the teen's safety. However, I do not believe that it is the city council's place to interfere in the personal lives of these people. There are many reasons for teens to be out late at night, such as getting home from work or just waiting to be picked up by their guardian, and a set curfew for teens would cause many of them to be unfairly punished for doing things that can hardly be called criminal. Many teens hold part-time jobs, either to
curfew laws restrict the hours that juveniles may be on the streets or in public places at night (Sutphen and Ford). Some people consider curfews infringing on people’s constitutional rights. Curfews are hard to implement by law enforcement, and, in fact, take law enforcement away from more serious crimes. More crimes occur during daytime hours and more children are victimized in their homes than on the streets. Although curfews are made to protect our juveniles and to deter crime by juveniles, does imposing these curfews violate the juvenile’s civil rights and target the true underlying problems involved in enforcing
Curfew is something that most teens deal with at some point in their life. The curfew could be set by their parents, their parole officer, or even their coach if they are traveling with a sports team. These guardians set a curfew to try to keep their teens out of trouble but it will not stop teens from doing something that they shouldn't. They will just do what they want to do earlier in the day. If a 10 pm curfew was enforced, that curfew would interfere with the lives of teens that have jobs that require them to work later than the curfew allows. They would have to work shorter shifts which causes them to make less money. Some teenagers might not work so close to home and that would cause problems in their schedule too. Their shift could end at 9 pm but if they get caught in traffic at 9:30 pm, there is a chance that they will get pulled over after ten and then they have no way to prove that they are coming from
One other reason why curfews keep teens out of trouble is that curfews set by parents are a way of showing that the parents care about the teen. (Boekestein, 2010) suggests that teens actually want to spend time with their parents but do not know how to. A curfew is the brainchild of parents all over the world to make sure that their teen is safe and also to be able to spend quality time with them while they still can. Without the curfew, teens would spend all their time with their friends but miss out on the most important people of all, which are their parents. Although it might not seem that curfews are a way to spend time with the teen, it surely is. According to (Boekestein, 2010), a teen said what all teens were trying to say, which is they don’t care about other things in life, they love their parents and would like to spend more time with them than they normally do. A teen also said that he only talks to his parents in the car or during dinner as their hectic schedule demands the parents to be on their toes all the time.
Curfew is a set time which teenagers will have to schedule their activities around. Generally, this curfew doesn’t change and helps your teen to understand boundaries. It is a wonderful idea for teens to have curfews because it teaches them to be responsible and also considerate of other people around them. As teenagers, it is natural for adolescents to feel like their freedoms are being taken away and that their parents don’t know what is best. However, curfew is put in place for the direct opposite, which is keeping teenagers out of trouble. Curfew teaches teenagers time management, it could lower the crime rate in local areas, and it could give teenagers an overall better relationship with their parents. Because of these reasons, I
Although having a curfew for it to be illegal for teenagers to be on the streets after ten o’clock p.m. on weekdays or after midnight on weekends would be beneficial in exceptional and deficient ways, many citizens will disagree with having a curfew. The eminently important reason Dierks, Arkansas, should have a teenage curfew is for the security of the teenagers. Another reason is for the parent to have control over their child, instead of their child being undisciplined. On the other hand, having a curfew could hinder maturity.
43 % of public high schools start before 8 a.m. Studies show that kids in school need 8.5-9.5 hours of sleep each night. Studies also show that 2/3 of kids in school get less than 7 hours of sleep each night. Because of all of these facts, 33% of high school students fall asleep in class. School should start later than 8 because kids still in school need more sleep than the 6-7 hours they get.
Everyone has always hated getting up super early in the morning to go to school. As children get older they move to different schools, from elementary to middle to high school, and the start times get earlier and earlier. In elementary school it was never a problem getting up but as we get older, it becomes more difficult to get up. Schools start so early in the morning that it is hard to focus and students tend to either miss more of their earlier classes or earn lower grades compared to their later classes. In addition, early start times also lead to various medical problems. Schools everywhere should start later because it would beneift the stduents.
How many of you would rather be asleep right now? I am assuming that mostly everyone sitting here would say yes, including myself. I wake every weekday morning at 6:30 and personally see all the proven negative effects of teens waking up at an hour they aren’t mean to. Sleep patterns throughout teenage years are to go to sleep late then wake up late. While for adults and children, it is the exact opposite. Elementary schools start at 8:45 while most of those kids do not need that exact hour of sleep. That extra hour of sleep given to high school students could make a world of a difference.
First and foremost, city council should make staying out late for teenagers illegal because of danger. If city council makes this illegal, it could prevent some of the kidnapping, use of drugs, or killings. Most things happen late at night because people are less seen, if teenagers are made to be home at a curfew, fewer of these dangers will occur to our town’s teenagers.
Did you know that approximately 87% of high school students get less than the recommended 9 hours of sleep every night? The majority of high schools students are not getting enough sleep each night because they have to wake up very early each morning for school. Many are sleep deprived, have trouble functioning during the day, and often do poorly on tests and quizzes. This problem could easily be solved if high schools pushed back start times to after 830am.
Many teenagers have a set time they have to be home by their parents. Usually teenagers must be home from dates and nights out with friends by anywhere from 10 o’clock at night to 2 o’clock in the morning. Each parent has extremely different curfews set for their children, based on the individual level of responsibility and trust levels. Some local government decides to set their own curfews, to keep teens off the streets at night and out of trouble. Many people argue whether this actually solves anything, or is even legal to do, since it is taking away a piece of teenager’s freedom. Although there are many good and bad points to enforcing curfews, they should be less enforced because they do not necessarily keep teens out of trouble,
Teenagers are safer inside than outside after dark because of all the dangerous people. Those people out in the dark could kidnap them and the teens could get really hurt. There are over 200,000 child abductions per year. If there wasn't any curfews then there would probably be more kidnappings. A sophomore from the Portales High School by the name of Enrique Cabrals thinks that most teens that are out past their curfews are not getting in trouble but in some
Having a teenage curfew is ineffective and useless. Many people argue that the curfews are necessary because it will keep young people out of trouble. They also say that teenagers are more likely to get in trouble late than they would during daylight. Teens are looked at as the age group that causes the most trouble, and society targets them when it comes to matter for crime, however many people believe that teens are responsible for a large percentage of crimes and that having a curfew in effect will help lower crime rates. I disagree with this because I don't think teenagers should be forced to follow a ridged time schedule because of a curfew.
Just because they have a curfew it doesn’t mean that they aren’t going to get in trouble. It may limit the things they do. Which in turn limits the trouble they get in, but it doesn’t stop them from doing things to get them in trouble. (Wylie Tanton said on April 11, 2012 “I personally think teens shouldn't have a curfew because whether or not they have curfew teens still get themselves into trouble, not only during the night. http://www.collegenet.com/elect/app/app?service=external/Forum&sp=42891)