You hear it all the time. If you are in the band, you are a nerd. If you play sports, you are a dumb jock. Teenagers are stereotyped all the time, and many are unfair and have no true basis for reality. These absurd claims not only hurt the individual being stereotyped in the short and long run, but it has a detrimental effect on society itself. This issue is best diagnosed and articulated by the following sources: “The Effects of Teenage Stereotyping,” “Stereotypical Teenager?” and “Teens Aren’t Fairly in Media.” First off, the essay “The Effects of Teenage Stereotyping” by Kristine Tucke effectively manifests the significant matter of stereotyping. She mentions that “Stereotyping isn’t usually productive or beneficial to a teen’s mental …show more content…
He mentions that there are “many misconceptions about teenagers.” Mitch is a male teenager who sports long hair. Because of this, he is suspected to be many things, including “rebellious, troubled, angry, arrogant, or any other sort of stereotype out there” (Mitch). In fact, Mitch has long hair not to show insubordination, but simply because he likes having long hair, and he is far from what society thinks of him. The article states that, at times, people are precautions around teenagers because they expect them to all be menacing, when that is far from true. Mitch, like so many other teens, are expected to have connections with drugs and alcohol―he is a hard-line opponent of both. The author believes that stereotypes negatively affect the wellbeing of many teenagers. They may be pressured to turn into the stereotypical teen and, as a result, may begin drinking or doing drugs. Not every teenager fits the universal description, so why does society continue to assume the worst about every teen. And this does not only apply to teens, but to everybody, because nobody has the right to assume about a large group without a true basis for