Sei sulla pagina 1di 6

supporting families in changing times

byronchild www.byronchild.com

Teens
why nagging What are they
doesn’t work doing to our
food?
7steps
to easing the
morning mayhem!

WHY BOYS
WON’T READ
Beating the
AUSTRALIA $8.95
NZ $12.00
USA $8.95
bedroom blues
16 / Dec 05 - Feb 2006 H E A L I NG T HRO UG H I NT I MA C Y

encouraging the evolutionary imperative of conscious parenting


special feature
THERE IS A LONG HISTORY of

Into the successful people having fairly dodgy


adolescent years and this has been

Mystery
reflected in their school reports. For
example, the headmaster of English
comedian Stephen Fry wrote on his
report in the early seventies, ‘He has
glaring faults and they have certainly
glared at us this term’.

of the
Norman Wisdom, an actor, received
a report that said, ‘The boy is every

Adolescent
inch a fool but luckily for him he’s not
very tall‘.
His teacher who commented, ‘all
glib cleverness and humbug’ similarly
dismissed Carl Jung.

So let’s take a walk through the


brain and mind of your average
adolescent. Now this is dangerous

Mind
territory indeed. It’s not just the
likelihood of tripping over the odd
By Andrew Fuller torrid sexual fantasy, encountering an
obsession with privacy that would
Photography and graphics by
baffle the most secretive hermit or
Lisa la Violette Engeman the risk of being crushed by the wild
pendulum of mood swings.
No, even more dangerous than that
is the knowledge that this is an area of
research that is expanding so rapidly
that in a few short years much of
what I am about to say may well seem
laughable in its simplicity. Oh well,
fools step where angels fear to tread
Adolescents are a mystery to many and as I’m certainly no angel, here
goes…
adults — especially their parents. It is an exciting time to be involved
in education. For the first time we
It is a time when three of the great can link the research that emotionally
supports young people and protects
changes of human life occur: them against suicide, drug abuse and
the ability to reproduce, the violence with our growing knowledge
of how they think, develop and learn.
establishment of an identity and the At the same time, there is a
great risk. Some of you will clearly
formal commencement of logical, remember the Professor in Gilligan’s
rational, reasoned thought, though Island. A brilliant man, able to invent
coconut compasses, a wind-powered
the attainment of logical thinking is generator of electricity not to mention
a thousand other quirky creations but
fairly patchy from where I sit. somehow never found time to either
Just how do their minds work work out a way to patch the hole in
the ship or build a new ship entirely.
anyway? Too often the discussion about
education risks becoming a debate
about which side of the ship we should
patch first. But what would happen if
we built an entirely new ship?

byronchild 14 byronchild 15
special feature
Don’t Waste Your Breath!
Cycles of development increases rapidly so that by two to three Primary schools often find that lobes — the bit that helps us to plan,
years of age, there are 15,000 synapses bullying increases around this age as ■ Realise that adolescents are not just a smaller version consider, control impulses, make wise
We have probably learned more in the per neuron. In many ways you could children jostle for position with peers. judgements; in short to be kind, caring,
past few years about the way people argue that you will never be cleverer, For this reason, it makes sense for schools of adults. The adolescent brain is in transition. It differs considerate people — are the last bit
learn than we have in the past 50 more flexible or more adaptable than to create peer relationship programs that neuro-chemically and anatomically from an adult brain. to mature. In fact someone probably
years. Much of this upsurge has been you were when you were three. include bullying prevention, emotional should put a sign on the frontal lobes
due to the proliferation of PET scans Up until the age of three, children intelligence and resilience. of most early adolescents saying ‘closed
(Positron Emission Tomography) and are like sponges. Given sufficient time It’s at this point that we start to see ■ Remember that adolescents’ frontal lobes are ‘closed for construction‘. The frontal lobes are
FMRI (functional magnetic resonance and attachment with a caring adult and the brain gearing up for adolescence. for construction’. Expecting teenagers to show a lot of being restructured at this time in a way
imaging) studies. a reasonably interesting environment, Many of the neurological changes that prepares them for adult life.
The three-pound blob of grey matter
forethought, planning, consideration and impulse control is
they just learn. They absorb their that occur in the brain during the teenage If you are wondering what’s the big
that sits on the top of your neck is the surroundings and are especially years commence well before they get to like expecting a goldfish to recite Shakespeare. deal with the frontal lobes, it’s really the
most complex, adaptable, regenerating interested in differences. In fact they high school. A fact any primary school frontal lobes that allow us to be civilised
object we know of. And it’s busiest learn by being attuned to differences. teacher will confirm with a sad nod of and human. Susan Greenfield estimates
when we are children.
■ The brain is re-structuring to become more efficient.
This is true of babies and remains true the head. that over the course of history the size
The way the mind develops is for all of us throughout our lives. Babies While adults often view the earlier Therefore we need to capitalise on this re-structuring. Help of frontal lobes in humans has increased
not a neat sequence of events. Recent are particularly interested in faces and onset of puberty with dismay, it may them to develop the habits and routines that allow them to by 29% compared with chimpanzees
research is confirming what two of the stripes. actually benefit some young people.
great thinkers of child development
work smarter not harder.
This means from birth we are Early maturers score slightly higher
(Jean Piaget and Maria Montessori) intensely interested in our social on IQ tests than their later maturing
postulated — that children’s minds environment: we notice difference, we counterparts and this small advantage ■ Parents need to be their
develop in fits and starts followed focus our learning towards emotions, we appears to persist into adulthood.
by periods of consolidation. These
teenage children’s frontal
try to draw causal connections between During these years, the brain starts
processes were labelled as assimilation events and we want to create meaning to slow down. An eight- or nine-year lobes. Asking an adolescent
old’s brain runs at about twice the speed to do a lot of forward plan-
that yours does and between 8 and 18 ning is like asking a dog to
it slows down to its adult running rate.
.. the frontal lobes — the bit that helps us to Interestingly, this appears to be followed study physics. This is also
plan, consider, control impulses, make wise by a split pathway with some students the reason why too much
languishing and loitering their way in freedom too soon does
judgements, in short to be kind, caring, to the senior years. With others, often
not seem to help too many
around the middle of Year Ten, the
considerate people — is the last bit to mature. shutters come off, they come out of the young people.
fogs and mists of adolescence, the light
goes back on and they suddenly get it in
and accommodation by Piaget and and to try out our knowledge in new a way they haven’t for years. The lucky ■ Last but not least, never
were described as cycles of learning by settings. parents of this group heave a sigh of underestimate your power.
Montessori. We are born to learn about new relief and if they are clever, take credit Adolescents need someone
In terms of brain development, there places and people and to adjust to what for it all.
appear to be times of overproduction we find there. This means children
around them — an adult
or exuberance during which we may be already know a whole lot more about who has more options than
highly receptive to new information and learning than adults do.
Use it or lose it —
they do. Someone who they
able to gain specific skills more easily. Then at about three or four years of synaptic pruning
During childhood and adolescence, this age, something happens and it all stops.
may battle with, but some-
Between ten years of age and puberty,
seems to be the way the brain develops, It is almost as if four-year-olds stop in the brain ruthlessly destroys its weakest one who ultimately they
overdoing it in terms of production and their tracks, look around in bewilderment connections, preserving only those that imitate and emulate, and
then cutting back on what is not needed and express this puzzlement by asking experience has shown to be useful, The
later. It’s a pretty nifty system because the question why?
believe it or not, that some-
adage here is use it or lose it — and this
it’s precisely that overproduction It is estimated that a four-year-old applies at any age. This synaptic pruning one is you.
that allows us to choose to hone and asks a why question every two and a half continues throughout life but occurs
specialise our skills. minutes! mostly during the late childhood and
If we saw a diagram of key social These are the wilful years in which teenage years so that the synapses that
competencies at different ages, we children learn impulse control. Children carry the most messages get stronger to become more clever and efficient.
would get a map of approximately who do not learn this at this time can and the weaker ones get cut out. This It is important to capitalise on this by
three-year cycles. Of course there is learn how to control their impulses later, helps in refinement and specialisation. helping young people to create patterns
individual variability as well as gender but it is harder. This is why the experiences we give of thinking and habits of learning that
differences but nevertheless a map such Around the age of six, there is a children and young people between their are productive. By doing this we put
as this can be used to help target specific second surge as the brain starts to use 9th and 18th years are so important. into place trajectories of thinking and
behaviours and learning processes at language in increasingly complex ways. As many as 30,000 synapses may be learning that lead to success.
different times. Aggression management is an important lost per second over the entire cortex in
Children’s brains are much busier social competency at this time. the early adolescent brain leading to an
and quite a bit cleverer than adults. Up to the age of nine or ten the brain ultimate loss of almost one half of the
Frontal lobes — closed
From birth, the brain is busy setting continues to be twice as active as an synapses that were present in the pre- for construction
up connections. At birth each neuron adult’s. Around the age of nine years adolescent period. The second thing that happens in
has 2,500 synapses and the number peer relationships seem to predominate. The brain at this time is restructuring adolescents’ brains is that the frontal

byronchild 16 byronchild 17
special feature
Handy Hints Silkwood
for Improving because their brains are whose have increased by 17% and cats
whose frontal lobes have only grown
Emotions are in the Steiner School
driver’s seat
Learning in doing so much develop-
ment. Always remember
by 3%.
So if the early adolescents’ frontal A couple of other interesting things Gold Coast
Teens there is no such thing
as a sleep bank. So just
lobes have essentially gone missing
in action for a time, this means that
are happening in the adolescent brain.
The first is that hormones become Nurturing a quiet
teenagers’ brains are all tuned up for
■ Most learning doesn’t because you slept 10 hours emotions, fighting, running away and
more powerful and adolescents’ brains
show more activity in the emotional
confidence
happen at school! one night doesn’t mean romance, but not so well tuned up for parts of the brain (known as the limbic • Co-educational
planning, controlling impulses and system) than they do in the planning
Children spend only 15% you can get away with only forward thinking. •Affordable
and impulse control parts of the brain
of their time at school. They sleeping six hours the next This means that when a frustrated (known as the frontal lobes and the pre- • Independent
spend more time asleep night. Students who don’t parent says to their teenager, ‘Why frontal cortex). • Pre-School to Year 7
didn’t you think of the consequences?’, This means that adolescents learn
(33%) than they do at get enough sleep have to the kid invariably replies, ‘As if’. By the best when there is emotion involved!
school. Most of their time work much harder to do way you know that ‘whatever’ means Adolescents remember stuff about
(52%) is at home, awake, well at school. yes and ‘as if’ means no, don’t you? themselves and stuff that is relevant to
Some parents kind of forget this. their life situations. As Homer Simpson
mucking around, playing, They wouldn’t dream of giving their would say, ‘doh!’.
and learning about life and ■ Eat a good breakfast teenager free access to their life savings Adolescents like intensity, excitement,
John P. Vanderzwart FCPA
it’s what they do with that and drink water. but they will reasonably frequently leave and arousal. They are drawn to music, 39 Shepherds Hill Lane,
them in charge of a $200,000 house full intensity and horror films. Around this
ACCOUNTANT AND TAX AGENT time that is important. If your Mum ever said have of fine furniture and still be stunned by Mount Nathan
time adolescents give off exaggerated
fish or eggs for breakfast the results! secondary signals (rolling of eyes, long (4 Kms from Nerang)
Suite 3, 16 The Terrace, ■ Most of their future because it’s brain food, Parents need to be their teenage deep sighs, etc). Unwise parents and Ph. 07 55962266
children’s frontal lobes. Asking teachers respond to these.
Brunswick Heads, NSW 2483 learning also won’t occur she was right! As long as Fax. 07 55962199
Email: jpva@nor.com.au in school.
Ph: (02) 6685 1000
it’s medically safe to do so, Website:
An estimated 70% of the a breakfast that is high in www.silkwoodsteiner.qld.edu.au
www.silkwoodsteiner.qld.edu.au
Fax: (02) 6685 1229
jobs that will exist in the
So if the early adolescents’ frontal lobes info@silkwoodsteiner.qld.edu.au
protein (think cheese, milk,
year 2020 do not exist now. bacon, eggs) and lower in have essentially gone missing in action for a
Knowledge is doubling carbohydrates (think cereal, time, this means that teenagers’ brains are
CREATIVE every three years. Fifty orange juice and toast) pro- all tuned up for emotions, fighting, running
PHOTOGRAPHY years ago a high school motes concentration and
graduate left school know- learning. Also encourage away and romance, but not so well tuned up
By Katrina ing about 75% of what they your child to drink lots of for planning, controlling impulses and forward
Folkwell would need to know in their water; the brain runs on it! thinking.
birth pregnancy working life — today’s high
school graduate will leave
portraits weddings ■ Use aromas
knowing about 2%! The aromas most often an adolescent to do a lot of forward This is why it is absolutely pointless
(02) 6685 3706 associated with improve- planning is like asking a dog to study arguing with teenagers. I like to think
physics. This is also the reason why too that arguing with a teenager is like mud
Byron Bay ■ Limit TV watching, video ments in concentration and much freedom too soon does not seem wrestling with a pig — you both end up
and computer games. memory are lemon, basil to help too many young people. dirty but only the pig is happy!
katfolkwell15@hotmail.com Bad news for those of you and rosemary. Early teenagers are not yet to grown Not only are they emotionally
into themselves. The average teenager charged, they are lousy at reading other
with older children! At 17 gains 20 kilograms and grows almost people’s emotions. This is particularly
years of age the optimal ■ Limit the amount of half a metre in the space of four or true of fear in others.
amount of TV viewing is part-time work. five years. I’m sure many of you know The puzzling thing to me is that if
the sensation of being in a room with the brain at this time is so tuned into the
half an hour per day. And Senior secondary students a group of young people who seem to emotions, why don’t we capitalise on
while some exposure to should not work more than be a clumsy jumble of elbows, knees, this? Instead it seems that we are yet to
computer games is good, ten hours a week at a part- pimples and groins. Just as they haven’t grasp in any meaningful way that there
grown into their bodies, they haven’t is a great deal of crucial learning that
too much can be toxic. time job. If they do so, quite grown into their brains either. simply cannot be accomplished while
there is clear evidence that It’s almost as if teenagers at this stage dressed up in uniforms that promote
■ More than nine hours their marks will suffer. have a very powerful, juiced up sports sedentary learning or timetabled in the
car with great acceleration, terrific lines, itty-bitty episodes we call lessons.
of sleep. great sex appeal, but very poor brakes, Is the teaching of ‘subjects’ that
Teenagers need as much From Help Your Child Succeed At oh, and a driver with the road sense of obliges each secondary teacher to try to
School by Andrew Fuller an earwig. cope with success in learning for 150 to
sleep as children, partly

byronchild 18 byronchild 19
special feature

It may well be that the Peer affiliation may also they were children. Adolescents need adults. The amygdala may also be
promote learning. To learn, more sleep than they did as children more easily activated in adolescents.
brain develops best humans are hard-wired to do — around 9 and a quarter hours. Most In one experiment, young people were
two things: teenagers’ brains aren’t ready to wake reported to exhibit greater activity in the
when allowed • Experience differences; and up until 8 or 9 in the morning. amygdala than in the frontal lobes when
• To imitate (watch what other
to play, linger and people do and copy them).
Teenagers who are sleep deprived do
less well at school and are more prone to
engaged in a task requiring subjects
to identify emotional states from facial
persist in areas of Imitations are tried out and feelings of sadness and hopelessness. In expressions — adults showed greater
if successful become patterns or short, they feel fairly crappy. frontal activity.
interest... habits. One interesting but curious research
finding reveals that young people with
Teenagers are nothing if they Feelin’ stressed low resting heart rates are more likely
are not great imitators. Fashion,
The decision-making ability of to be aggressive and engage in high risk
music, lip-gloss, Lynx deodorant
adolescents may be more vulnerable to behaviours. This raises the possibility
— it’s all around you!
disruptions and the stresses and strains that adolescents who have been exposed
As well as being great
of everyday living than that of adults. to high stress during childhood may
imitators, they are wary in case
They may also respond more strongly habituate to that level of stress and
they lose peer approval. So they
to stressful events physiologically with become harder to excite or motivate and
are, to quote Con the Fruiterer,
greater blood pressure and cardiac use more extreme ways of behaving and
‘Looking, looking, looking!’
output response than children. relating to others to relieve boredom.
Adolescents are often sleep deprived The adolescent brain is in transition,
which may in turn increase vulnerability and therefore teens should not be
Needing a lift to stress. They may have more negative treated just like smaller versions
Adolescents are harder to life experiences (friendship changes, of adults. When we grasp the basics
motivate and are motivated by alterations in romantic liaisons, school behind their development, it makes it
different things than adults. They work) that they tend to view more easier to understand how they tick, and
seek out new stimuli, novelty negatively and have less control over. what they need from their parents and
and risk. This may well increase their sense of teachers. Rethinking their education and
Synaptic pruning may be helplessness. how we support them as parents so that
associated with a major decline The more negative life events an it reflects what we understand from the
in the amount of excitory adolescent has the more likely they are research is key to their wellbeing.
stimulation reaching the cortex. to engage in problem behaviours and
Glucose metabolism, a measure the less likely they are to engage in a Andrew Fuller is a clinical psychologist who lec-
of brain activity, declines during wide range of positive activities. tures in child, adolescent and family psychology
the adolescent years. This may and consults to communities and schools about the
account for the search for greater promotion of resilience. He is the author and a fel-
amounts of excitement. When you’re mad, you’re low of the University of Melbourne’s Department
of Learning and Educational Development as well
Between late childhood and really mad as the Department of Psychiatry.
early adolescence there is a ‘fall Aggressive behaviour peaks during See www.andrewfuller.com.au or
from grace’ with the number of adolescence in a number of primate visit www.inyahead.com.au for book sales.
reports of feeling ‘very happy’ species. Aggression has its origins in
dropping by 50%. the limbic areas and particularly the References
Even when engaged in the amygdala, which relates to the emotions,
same activities, adolescents • Allen, M.T. and Matthews, K.A. (1997)
and shapes fight or flight responses. Hemodynamic responses to laboratory stressors
find them less pleasurable than When emotional, adolescents have in children and adolescents: the influences of age,
do adults. They experience an lower activity in their frontal lobes and race and gender, Psychophysiology, 34,329-339.
increase in negative feelings, more activity in the amygdala than • Blum, R.W. (2005), A Case for School
240 individual students really the best here that the adolescent brain is not depressed mood and mood Connectedness Educational Leadership. April,
model we can come up with? Is a system only tumultuously emotional, it is also ranges than younger or older people.
that divides learning into multiple areas incredibly social. As Linda Spear points Therefore they may attain less
suitable for a group of young people out, most species show an alteration positive impact from stimuli with low
who essentially don’t have functioning in social behaviour around the time or moderate incentive value. Part of
frontal lobes and therefore can’t of adolescence. Play fighting and play the answer is to bombard them with Pregnancy and
transfer information from one setting to behaviour increase before declining as positive experiences.
another?
It may well be that the brain develops
sexual maturity is reached.
The intensity of peer relationships
As children get older their attitude What are you taking Women’s
to school deteriorates and adolescents’ home this Christmas?
best when allowed to play, linger and
persist in areas of interest and that this
may serve two purposes here: an
evolutionary advantage as well as a
academic motivation declines over time.
Discover our wonderful range of toys
Health
Considering how to increase motivation
may especially be so when the early learning purpose. The interest in peers and our 100% certified organic bears.
in students is a major issue for schools.
adolescent is in the company of someone may have traditionally helped the • organic & chemical-free products for Acupuncture
whose opinion he or she cares about. dispersal of adolescents away from the whole family. Safe, gentle, effective treatment for infertility,
the family group thereby avoiding Getting the zzzz’s • Free delivery for orders over $100 pre- and post-natal care.
inbreeding. An age related emigration The Organic Trading Company
Simone Ormsby, B. Sc. (hons.), B. H. Sc. (Acup.), Cert. Jap.
Friends and more friends is common among mammalian species Adolescents eat more and they sleep
584 Darling St, Rozelle NSW 2039
Acup., Cert. Ch. Herbs.
Mullumbimby 02 6684 1255, 0414 476 711
and may be evolutionarily adaptive. less. They have a preference for sleeping
It’s not going to come as news to anyone (02) 9555 999 www.organictradingco.com simone@spiritpoints.com.au
and waking later than they did when

byronchild 20 byronchild 21
special feature

62,7,16-20. • Marsh, H.W and Kleitamn, S. (2002)


• Carskadon, M.A.,Acebo, C. and Oskar, G.J. (2004) Extracurricular School Activities: The good, the
Regulation of Adolescent Sleep: Implications for bad and the nonlinear, Harvard Educational review,
Behaviour, Annual New York Academy of Science, 72,4,464-511.
1021,276-291. • Moffit, T. E., (1993), Adolescence limited and
• Csikszentimihalyi, M. Larson, R., and Prescott, life course persistent antisocial behaviour: a
S. (1977). The Ecology of Adolescent Activity developmental taxonomy, Psychological Review, 100,
and experience, Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 674-701.
6,281-294. • Newcombe, N., and Dubas, J.S. (1989) Individual
• Dahl, R.E. (2004) Adolescent Brain Development: differences in cognitive ability: are they related to
A Period of Vulnerabilities and Opportunities, the timing of puberty? In Lerner, RM., Foch, T.T.
Annual New York Academy of Science, 1021,1-22. (Eds.) Biological, psychological interactions in early
• Damasio, A.R. (1995) Descartes Error; Emotion adolescence, Hilldale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum and
Reason and the Human Brain, New York: Quill. Associates. 249-302
• De Bellis, M.D., Keshavan, M., Beers, S.R., Hall, J., • Perkins-Gough, D. (2005), Special Report /
Frustaci.K., Masalehdan, A., Noll, J., and Boring, A.M. Fixing High Schools Educational Leadership, April,
(2001) Sex Differences in Brain Maturation during 62,7,88-89.
Childhood and Adolescence, Cerebral Cortex, 11, • Restak, R. (2001) Mozart’s Brain and the Fighter
552-557. Pilot, New York: Harmony.
• Deci, E.L., Koestner, R. and Ryan, R.M. (1999) A • Simmons, R.G., Burgeson, R., Reef, M.J. (1988)
meta-analytic review of experiments examining Cumulative change at entry to adolescence. In
the effects of extrinsic rewards on intrinsic Gunnar, M.R., Collins, W.A. (Eds.) Development
motivation, Psychological Bulletin, 125,627-688. during the transition to adolescence. vol 21. Hillsdale,
• Fuller, A. (2004) Help Your Child Succeed At NJ Lawrence Erlbaum Associates P. 123-150.
School, Inyahead Press: Queenscliff. • Sisk, C.L. and Foster, D.L., (2004) The neural basis
• Gee, J.P. (2003) What Video Games Have to of puberty and adolescence, Nature Neuroscience,
Teach Us about Learning and Literacy, New York: 7 (10): 1040-1047.
Palgrave. • Spear, L.P. (2000) The adolescent brain and age-
• Gopnik, A., Meltzoff, A. and Kuhl, P. (1999) How related behavioural manifestations, Neuroscience
Babies Think, London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. and Biobehavioral Reviews, 24,417-463.
• Greenfield, S. (1997) By some estimates, the • Spear, L.P. (2000) Neurobehavioral Changes in
human pre-frontal cortex: The Human Brain: a Adolescence, Current Directions in Psychological
guided tour, Basic Books. Science, 9,4,111-114.
• Giedd, J., Rumsey, J.M., Castellanos, F.X., • Strauch, B. (2003) Why are they so weird?
Rajapakse, J.C., Kaysen, D., Vaituzis, A.C., Vauss, What’s really going on in a teenager’s brain,
Y.C., Hamburger, S.D., Rapoport, J. (1996) A London: Bloomsbury.
Quantitative MRI study of the corpus callosum • Tomlinson, C.A. and Doubet, K. (2005), Reach
in children and adolescents, Developmental Brain Them to Teach Them Educational Leadership.
Research, 91, 274-280. April, 62,7, 8-15.
• Huttenlocher, P.R. (1999) Dendritic and synaptic • Wagner, E.F. (1993). Delay of gratification, coping
development in human cerebral cortex: time with stress and substance use in adolescence,
course and critical periods, Developmental Experimental and Clinical Psychopharmacology, 1,27-
Neuropsychology, 16,3,347-349. 43.
• Keating, D.P. (1990) Adolescent Thinking. In • Wolfe, P. (2001). Brain Matters — translating
Feldman, S.S., Elliot, G.R. (Eds) At the threshold: research into classroom practice, Association
the developing adolescent, Cambridge, MA, for Supervision and Curriculum Development:
Harvard Uni Press. (P. 54-89) Virginia, USA.
• Larson, R. and Richards, M.H. (1994) Divergent Wolfe, P. (2002) The Adolescent Brain: A work in
Realities: the emotional lives of mothers, fathers progress, www.patwolf.com
and adolescents, New York: Basic. • Yurgelen, Todd, D. (1998). Brain and psyche
• Maggs, J.L., Almieda, D.M. and Galambos, N.L. seminar. Whitehead Institute for Biomedical
(1995) Risky business: the paradoxical meaning of Research, Cambridge MA June 11.
problem behaviour for young adolescents, Journal
of Early Adolescence, 15,344-362.

$BSFGPSZPVSGBNJMZnaturally
with Organic Herbal Medicines
'JSTU"JE,JUT M ullumbimby Herbals
$IJMESFOT5POJDT supply the largest range of
"EVMUT5POJDT Organic Herbs in Australia.
)PNPFPQBUIJD Order by phone. Call one of our qualified
naturopaths for professional, friendly
*NNVOJTBUJPO,JU advice. Let us tailor a specific
$MFBOTF,JUT medicine for your needs.
":VSWFEJD
02 66 843002
.FEJDJOFT

byronchild 22

Potrebbero piacerti anche