Lessons in Adolescence
Lessons in Adolescence
Lessons on Understanding & Supporting Creatively-Driven Teens & Tweens with Dr. Alaina Johnson
The Season 4 opener features a conversation with Dr. Alaina Johnson, a clinical psychologist and a mother of three creatively-driven boys. Alaina is the author of the book Parenting Talent: The Grown-Up’s Guide to Understanding and Supporting Creatively-Driven Teens and Tweens and she is the head of a practice by the same name specializing in coaching others and speaking and advising on the topic. The combination of Alaina’s professional background in psychology and personal experience with her three, creatively-driven boys, has enabled her to connect the dots between the science of adolescent development and the experience of young adolescents with certain creative talents, which, importantly, are not just innate traits that, some kids have just been lucky to be born with.
In part one of their conversation, Alaina and Jason talk about her inspirations for writing the book, which include her own creatively-driven boys as well as a noticeable gap in information for parents like her to know how to understand and support them, what talent really means and the level of effort it requires among youth to actualize it, how the developmental changes in early adolescence affect youth in the creative arts in specific ways, including the development of identity and dealing with the many emotions that stem from vulnerability, and the evolution of young people’s awareness of their own ability to affect the world and their place in it.
In part two, they talk about how parents and families can engage with creative teens and tweens in the most supportive and effective ways, including when and how to communicate, keeping pace with their rapid development to be in sync with what they need at their age and stage of development, and some of the particular issues the current generation of youth are faced with. We also talk about Alaina’s next steps in helping others understand and support their own creative teens and tweens at home.
Additional Readings and Resources
- Parenting Talent: The Grown-Up’s Guide to Understanding and Supporting Creatively-Driven Teens and Tweens
- Haimovitz, Kyla, and Carol S. Dweck. “What Predicts Children’s Fixed and Growth Intelligence Mind-Sets?Not Their Parents’ Views of Intelligence but Their Parents’ Views of Failure.” Psychological Science 27, no. 6 (2016): 859–869.
- Jensen, Frances E. The Teenage Brain: A Neuroscientist’s Survival Guide to Raising Adolescents and Young Adults. New York: Harper Paperbacks, 2016.
- Center for Parent and Teen Communication
- Episode 29: Lessons with Dr. Kenneth Ginsburg and Dr. Jillian Baker