Easy New Skill for Teenagers to Learn
Do you ever wonder if you've taught your teens enough life skills to go out into the real world and succeed? School fills them with facts and numbers, history, math, writing skills, and rudimentary sciences. But do our teens have the life skills to function in their day-to-day lives? If you could craft a series of 15-minute "you need to know this to function in the world" lessons, what would they be?
Here are 100 of some of the most common life skills that teens and college students need, but don't always have. While they are still home we can help them by teaching them to:
100 life skills to teach teens and college students
- Say "no"
- Set and manage a goal, with a timetable and milestones
- Communicate with and get to know professors and teaching assistants
- Manage their time with a calendar
- Read a bank statement and monitor an account balance
- Create a lifelong habit and plan for saving money
- Use ride-sharing services safely
- Make a phone call rather than texting (some things require a conversation)
- Understand, improve, and maintain your credit score
- Mail a package
- Address an envelope
- Figure out postage/buy stamps
- Make, change, or cancel an appointment
- Deposit, withdraw or move funds in an account (either by ATM, phone app, or teller)
- Find medical care in an emergency and how and when to call an ambulance
- Get involved in their community and help others
- Understand how compound interest impacts savings or borrowings
- Memorize their social security, credit card, and student ID numbers
- Turn off an overflowing toilet
- How to wisely borrow and lend money
- Manage peer pressure
- Walk away from…anything
- Utilize a meal plan and not waste money
- Do laundry
- Shop for groceries (lists, budget, coupons)
- Read nutrition labels
- Tip
- Make a list of favorite recipes
- Write a check
- Understand the terms when applying for a credit card
- Use any form of transportation including navigating and ticketing
- Choose a doctor
- Fill and refill a prescription
- Manage subscription services
- Correctly use over-the-counter medications
- Maintain scholarships and financial aid
- Eat healthily and resist unhealthy food choices
- Fill out health insurance forms
- Do their taxes
- Clean anything and everything
- Administer basic first aid
- React and what to do in a lockdown
- Be prepared for a weather/power emergency
- Find and work with a study group
- Find academic help/tutors/mentors on a college campus
- Cope with feelings of stress or being overwhelmed
- Decide between a doctor's appointment, urgent care, and the ER
- Understand medical coverage
- Write a resume
- Dress for an interview
- Complete a LinkedIn profile
- Stay in touch with friends and family
- Consume alcohol, safely
- Get and use birth control
- Live with a group of strangers
- Plunge a toilet
- Stay safe
- Get the right amount of sleep and exercise
- Know when to seek professional medical or mental health services
- Prepare if you are pulled over when driving
- Store and prepare food safely
- Read and understand a credit card statement
- Use basic tools for minor repairs
- Create and stick to a budget
- Deal with unexpected expenses
- Turn off a smoke alarm
- Stay healthy, including hand washing
- Use a fire extinguisher
- Recognize fraud in emails, phishing, and phone calls
- Write a professional email
- Stay current with the local and national news
- VOTE, because it matters
- Advocate with and ask questions of medical professionals
- Apply for jobs, internships, and on-campus positions
- Locate routing and account numbers on checks
- Remember and recognize important dates in other's lives
- Complete important forms like HIPAA, FERPA, Power of Attorney
- Get renter's insurance
- Aid a friend who has drunk too much
- Deal with a car accident
- Be clear about consent and the wishes of a romantic/sexual partner
- Be your own strongest advocate in a positive way
- Manage if a credit card is lost or stolen
- Write and send a handwritten thank-you note
- Pay bills on time and set up automatic payment
- Understand the expense and responsibility of owning a pet
- Follow an auto maintenance schedule
- Understand auto insurance and coverage
- Save money on textbooks
- Change bed sheets
- Manage social media presence
- Change a flat tire
- Sew a button
- Iron, or at a minimum steam an item of clothing
- Cope with loneliness
- Greet someone respectfully, with eye contact and a handshake
- Use jumper cables
- Research potential career paths
- Put yourself out there and make friends
- Move homes
But the most important thing we want to teach our teens is that this is a process and we are here to support and teach as they move towards their independence. Some of these lessons are quickly taught. Some life skills teens need take years to absorb. Many involve asking questions, getting it wrong, trying again, and learning along the way.
We made mistakes, lots of them and they will too. They can come to us for advice, counsel, or just an ear and we will not judge them nor will we grow weary of answering their questions. That's our job.
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Fifty Things Teens Can Do at 18 (Who Knew?)
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Source: https://grownandflown.com/soft-skills-for-teens/
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