I talk to adults who did everything we do but there wasn't mass-media and it wasn't on the front-page on newspapers because the older generations want to gratify themslves by exagerating the teenage generations plight.
Perhaps it is an insecurity. Every generation snipes at the next generation, perhaps to try to feel superior. .
I'm going to be the lone voice of dissent here then. The older generations gratifying themselves? Trying to feel superior? Without disrespect thats a view that shows little understanding of the extent of the problem. Anti social behaviour wasn't heard of in my parents day not because it didn't exist but because it wasn't as severe as it is today. I can remember people getting in dust ups over bikes/cars/possessions - but I never heard of anyone carrying a weapon to sort it out. I never heard of someone being kicked to death whilst young people trashed his street and made a horrible life for those living around them. I remember friends drinking a little at a young age - but I don't remember seeing them sitting on street corners jeering at passerby to the point of fear, or gesturing and swearing at any police officer who turns up to see whats going on.
I am no socialist and believe in individual responsibility but who bought up these children? And therein lies the problem.
I do not believe it is, the classic cliche, ' I blame the parents' but they do have a role to play.
So the problem lies with the parents or not? I don't follow you there. You say who bought them up? and therein lies the problem>
Discipline in schools. School appears to be a focal point of the older generation, 'exams are getting easier', ' schools are too soft'. Both of which, are rubbish.
I do not believe exams are getting easier whatsoever. Teaching is getting better. I take triples science and we are having to study work which our teacher did at degree level, he is very sceptical as to why we have to learn it. In History we do A-level questions!
Schools getting softer. I am unsure about this personally. In some cases, yes, they are too soft. But they are only too soft because it is the parents which complain if they are strict! School has turned into a nanny-state. Kids are scared to say the word 'black' and if you don't 'love and respect' someone you can get done for bullying no questions asked, you barely get a chance to defend yourself. The work load is increasing which is perhaps why it appears they are soft on people who do not do the work.
First you say schools are too soft and then you say youre unsure personally? Exams I don't believe are getting easier I agree there, but the resources you have at your disposal to study for these exams are far greater. Teaching isn't better or worse - its just different. Different due to the changes in population, in curriculum and in social values.
Schools are and will be a focal point for the older generation as many of us still believe that you are there to learn something useful. Many young people these days believe school is a social activity. My parents had it drummed into them that school was a necessity to get on in life, most teenagers around here seem to look for the first opportunity to skip school and sit outside a train station. Spot the reason why the older generation will focus on it?
I think many young people I come across on my daily travels lack respect above anything else. Their parents have rightly or wrongly given them anything they want, haven't taught them to respect people who are actually doing something for them (teachers/police officers/bus driviers/train conductors etc.) and have allowed their children to adopt the "me first" attitude. Therein lies the problem - everything else is secondary.