Cancer Warning Adds Wrinkle to Cellphone Debate
October 28, 2009 by admin
Filed under Business Ideas
chilhyun asked:
keyword:
NEW YORK
Cancer
cellphones
NEW YORK – When Amy Morris’ twin boys, then 11, went on an academic trip to Washington last year, she agreed to give them cellphones at the program’s request. But this summer she was dismayed to learn that girls at her 8-year-old daughter’s day camp were using cellphones they’d taken along in their backpacks.
“We were outraged,” says the Connecticut mother, who adds that the camp didn’t know. “These girls think it’s a cute game. But it’s inappropriate, and it’s unnecessary.”
It’s a signature parenting dilemma of the wireless age: Should kids have cellphones? And how old is old enough? It pits our understandable desire to keep tabs on our offspring – not to mention make them happy – against the instinctive feeling that it’s simply, well, wrong for youngsters to spend their time chatting and texting over the airwaves.
Now, there’s further ammunition for Morris and other reluctant parents like her to stand firm: The warning last week by the head of a prominent cancer-research institute to his faculty and staff. Limit cellphone use, he said, because of the possible cancer risk – especially when it comes to children, whose brains are still developing.
The warning from Dr. Ronald Herberman, director of the University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute, was based on early, unpublished data and came despite numerous studies that haven’t found a link between increased tumors and cellphone use.
But it’s struck a nerve among parents who already have other reasons to resist their children’s entreaties.
“Now we hear about this possible medical risk,” says Marybeth Hicks, an author, columnist and mother of four. “I couldn’t possibly know if it’s real or not. But I know that it’s probably not necessary for most children to have a cellphone.”
To her, “it’s part of this whole rush to adulthood – Hello Kitty backpacks for third-graders have cellphone pockets in them! Marketers have skillfully created a groundswell of begging among kids – and we all know that begging can work.”
Hicks, whose book “Bringing Up Geeks: How to Protect Your Kid’s Childhood in a Grow-Up-Too-Fast World,” is about just such problems, has personal experience with persistent children.
“My 10-year-old daughter thinks she’s deprived,” Hicks says. “She’s been saying she’s the only one at school without a phone, and it’s actually getting to be true.” And her son, she says, was the only kid in his eighth-grade class without a phone. (He just got one, right before freshman year in high school.)
Hicks, who lives in East Lansing, Mich., is aware that some parents feel cellphones are an essential security tool for their kids.
But, she says, “I always know where my kids are. A cellphone is a tool to negotiate the world once you have the responsibility to be out in the world on your own.”
Morris, of Weston, Conn., has decided that for her own kids, middle school is about the right time. “My boys are starting to walk home alone sometimes,” she says. “I want them to have a phone.”
Being boys, though, they tend to forget the darned things all the time – especially in situations when they actually need them.
So far, Morris has avoided giving one to her younger child, she says, not an easy thing in a society where kids, especially girls, are so sensitive to social pressures. “I think a lot of parents in this country just give in,” she says. She’s especially concerned about the rampant text messaging among the younger set.
Statistics from the Pew Research Center show just how deeply ingrained in our daily lives cellphones have become: Fully 78 percent of all adults own them, including 86 percent of 18- to 29-year-olds and 55 percent of Americans 65 and older. Pew doesn’t compile statistics on those under 18.
Text messaging, on the other hand, is the province of the young: 74 percent of 18- to 29-year-olds do it but only 6 percent of the 65-plus crowd.
Should the latest medical news cause huge concern among parents who have given in? “If you’ve got good reasons for them to have it, I’d go ahead,” says Frank Barnes, a professor who chaired a recent report on the subject. However, he added, “they’ve probably got other things they should be doing.”
Ultimately, parents have to make their own rules – but that’s difficult when the social pressure is so strong, says Lisa Bain, executive editor of Parenting magazine. “The age is creeping down,” she says. “Girls tend to get them younger. It’s become a status symbol – it makes them feel grown up.”
keyword:
NEW YORK
Cancer
cellphones
NEW YORK – When Amy Morris’ twin boys, then 11, went on an academic trip to Washington last year, she agreed to give them cellphones at the program’s request. But this summer she was dismayed to learn that girls at her 8-year-old daughter’s day camp were using cellphones they’d taken along in their backpacks.
“We were outraged,” says the Connecticut mother, who adds that the camp didn’t know. “These girls think it’s a cute game. But it’s inappropriate, and it’s unnecessary.”
It’s a signature parenting dilemma of the wireless age: Should kids have cellphones? And how old is old enough? It pits our understandable desire to keep tabs on our offspring – not to mention make them happy – against the instinctive feeling that it’s simply, well, wrong for youngsters to spend their time chatting and texting over the airwaves.
Now, there’s further ammunition for Morris and other reluctant parents like her to stand firm: The warning last week by the head of a prominent cancer-research institute to his faculty and staff. Limit cellphone use, he said, because of the possible cancer risk – especially when it comes to children, whose brains are still developing.
The warning from Dr. Ronald Herberman, director of the University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute, was based on early, unpublished data and came despite numerous studies that haven’t found a link between increased tumors and cellphone use.
But it’s struck a nerve among parents who already have other reasons to resist their children’s entreaties.
“Now we hear about this possible medical risk,” says Marybeth Hicks, an author, columnist and mother of four. “I couldn’t possibly know if it’s real or not. But I know that it’s probably not necessary for most children to have a cellphone.”
To her, “it’s part of this whole rush to adulthood – Hello Kitty backpacks for third-graders have cellphone pockets in them! Marketers have skillfully created a groundswell of begging among kids – and we all know that begging can work.”
Hicks, whose book “Bringing Up Geeks: How to Protect Your Kid’s Childhood in a Grow-Up-Too-Fast World,” is about just such problems, has personal experience with persistent children.
“My 10-year-old daughter thinks she’s deprived,” Hicks says. “She’s been saying she’s the only one at school without a phone, and it’s actually getting to be true.” And her son, she says, was the only kid in his eighth-grade class without a phone. (He just got one, right before freshman year in high school.)
Hicks, who lives in East Lansing, Mich., is aware that some parents feel cellphones are an essential security tool for their kids.
But, she says, “I always know where my kids are. A cellphone is a tool to negotiate the world once you have the responsibility to be out in the world on your own.”
Morris, of Weston, Conn., has decided that for her own kids, middle school is about the right time. “My boys are starting to walk home alone sometimes,” she says. “I want them to have a phone.”
Being boys, though, they tend to forget the darned things all the time – especially in situations when they actually need them.
So far, Morris has avoided giving one to her younger child, she says, not an easy thing in a society where kids, especially girls, are so sensitive to social pressures. “I think a lot of parents in this country just give in,” she says. She’s especially concerned about the rampant text messaging among the younger set.
Statistics from the Pew Research Center show just how deeply ingrained in our daily lives cellphones have become: Fully 78 percent of all adults own them, including 86 percent of 18- to 29-year-olds and 55 percent of Americans 65 and older. Pew doesn’t compile statistics on those under 18.
Text messaging, on the other hand, is the province of the young: 74 percent of 18- to 29-year-olds do it but only 6 percent of the 65-plus crowd.
Should the latest medical news cause huge concern among parents who have given in? “If you’ve got good reasons for them to have it, I’d go ahead,” says Frank Barnes, a professor who chaired a recent report on the subject. However, he added, “they’ve probably got other things they should be doing.”
Ultimately, parents have to make their own rules – but that’s difficult when the social pressure is so strong, says Lisa Bain, executive editor of Parenting magazine. “The age is creeping down,” she says. “Girls tend to get them younger. It’s become a status symbol – it makes them feel grown up.”
How Your Age Influences Your Leadership Skills
May 15, 2009 by admin
Filed under Anti Aging
Simon Oates asked:
Aging is a process that we must all navigate through in life. Even though its the only challenge that we must all face – it often feels like a terribly personal one, and is often a challenge that we face alone. As we grow older, our leadership skills change, but do they improve or worsen?
How getting older reduces our leadership skills.
Firstly I shall look at the side of the debate that puts forward the notion that as we grow older, our ability to lead others actually deteriorates. I investigate possible reasons below.
1. Our control over children deteriorates as we are seen as out-of-touch
2. Our authority in public becomes questioned for the first time, as issues of our cognitive ability and other physical consequences start to affect the perceived quality of our judgement.
3. As memory starts to slowly deteriorate, we become less on the ball and may fall behind in fast moving areas of life, resulting in us not being seen as a leader.
How aging increases our leadership skills.
1. Our age makes us automatically seem experienced and wise in the workplace. We have a better understanding of what can go wrong, and how plans can fall apart – so our guidance is appreciated by those who are attempting a project for the first time.
2. Our appearance causes others to take us seriously. While youthful individuals may have all the energy in the world, they struggle getting places because people simply don’t have the faith in them. Older people receive respect that reduces this risk.
3. Long-standing relationships with others mean that we have far more influence over these people than young strangers could ever have, (when taking love out of the equation anyway!).
4. Knowing thoroughly how the world works, and having experience in so many parts of life means that we become more confident as we age, and in many cases become tougher as a result of life’s toils. It’s a statistical fact that older people are more likely to fight back against muggers than young people are. I think this demonstrates more clearly than anything else – that older people have a great spirit that potential ‘followers’ see in them too.
5. As life starts to slow down, we are able to see the big picture of life. For teenagers, life all too often is simply about getting through school as fast as possible and drinking as much as they can. It’s fast paced and many individuals lose sight of what matters in life. With this perspective in mind, older people have a greater ability of appealing to the good side of people, and often take the time to do nice things that wins colleagues and subordinate’s respect.
I hope these thoughts help you make your own mind up about whether Leadership is something that comes naturally with age or not, and whether older people actually have an advantage over younger individuals when it comes to having leadership potential. In my opinion, it does. And this gives me just another reason to smile on my birthday. Add your thoughts below by leaving a comment!
Aging is a process that we must all navigate through in life. Even though its the only challenge that we must all face – it often feels like a terribly personal one, and is often a challenge that we face alone. As we grow older, our leadership skills change, but do they improve or worsen?
How getting older reduces our leadership skills.
Firstly I shall look at the side of the debate that puts forward the notion that as we grow older, our ability to lead others actually deteriorates. I investigate possible reasons below.
1. Our control over children deteriorates as we are seen as out-of-touch
2. Our authority in public becomes questioned for the first time, as issues of our cognitive ability and other physical consequences start to affect the perceived quality of our judgement.
3. As memory starts to slowly deteriorate, we become less on the ball and may fall behind in fast moving areas of life, resulting in us not being seen as a leader.
How aging increases our leadership skills.
1. Our age makes us automatically seem experienced and wise in the workplace. We have a better understanding of what can go wrong, and how plans can fall apart – so our guidance is appreciated by those who are attempting a project for the first time.
2. Our appearance causes others to take us seriously. While youthful individuals may have all the energy in the world, they struggle getting places because people simply don’t have the faith in them. Older people receive respect that reduces this risk.
3. Long-standing relationships with others mean that we have far more influence over these people than young strangers could ever have, (when taking love out of the equation anyway!).
4. Knowing thoroughly how the world works, and having experience in so many parts of life means that we become more confident as we age, and in many cases become tougher as a result of life’s toils. It’s a statistical fact that older people are more likely to fight back against muggers than young people are. I think this demonstrates more clearly than anything else – that older people have a great spirit that potential ‘followers’ see in them too.
5. As life starts to slow down, we are able to see the big picture of life. For teenagers, life all too often is simply about getting through school as fast as possible and drinking as much as they can. It’s fast paced and many individuals lose sight of what matters in life. With this perspective in mind, older people have a greater ability of appealing to the good side of people, and often take the time to do nice things that wins colleagues and subordinate’s respect.
I hope these thoughts help you make your own mind up about whether Leadership is something that comes naturally with age or not, and whether older people actually have an advantage over younger individuals when it comes to having leadership potential. In my opinion, it does. And this gives me just another reason to smile on my birthday. Add your thoughts below by leaving a comment!




