Survey finds smart teenagers risk ridicule

Released on = August 29, 2006, 11:01 am

Press Release Author = Vicki Syal

Industry = Education

Press Release Summary = As teen self-esteem building movie Akeelah and the Bee
graced theatres across America, CB Teen magazine and HeyUGLY.org in conjunction with
Lions Gate films were busy surveying teens to see if they felt the need to \"dumb
down\" in today\'s school environments. Results of the survey indicate that few teens
are free from social insecurity associated with intelligence.

Press Release Body = (CHICAGO, IL) - As teen self-esteem building movie Akeelah and
the Bee graced theatres across America, CB Teen magazine and HeyUGLY.org in
conjunction with Lions Gate films were busy surveying teens to see if they felt the
need to \"dumb down\" in today\'s school environments.

Results of the survey, timed for today\'s release of the DVD, indicate that few teens
are free from social insecurity associated with intelligence. While there seems to
be a general shift towards intelligence being perceived as a positive social trait,
there are still many teens that do not believe it is acceptable to be yourself all
the time.

The first question of the survey asked ... \"Have you ever pretended you didn\'t know
something that you knew so your friends wouldn\'t feel intimidated?\" 41% of the 638
teens surveyed admitted that they do sometimes restrain information in order to
prevent a potentially uncomfortable situation.

The second question, \"Have you ever tried to hide your intelligence for fear people
would lose interest if they saw the \"real\" you?\" faired slightly better since 65% of
the teens polled said they rarely or never tried to conceal their intelligence.
However, 10% of teens still felt the need to disguise their intelligence in order to
fit in with their peers.

The third question \"Have you ever felt uncomfortable in the presence of people you
perceived as extremely intelligent?" merits concern because only 37% felt
comfortable around people they perceived to be extremely intelligent.

\"On a more positive note, less teens seem to be worried how they are perceived by
their significant others in a relationship, or how they perceive their partners,\"
noted Betty Hoeffner, president of Hey U.G.L.Y., the nonprofit empower teens with
self-esteem building tools. \"The fourth and fifth questions of our survey pertain to
whether a teenager has ever ended a relationship because someone\'s intelligence made
them uncomfortable or because their intelligence made their significant other
uncomfortable, respectively. A majority of responders (79%) replied they never
stopped dating someone because their partner\'s intelligence made them feel
uncomfortable, while another majority of 62% felt that no one had ever stopped
dating them because of their intelligence.\"

Why is it that young people today associate intelligence and education with
intimidation and all that is un-hip? When did not having an answer become the
correct answer? The problems may not always lie with the kids in question but the
kids around them, both inside the classrooms and out on the streets.

According to Marc Gonzales (founder of the Human Writes project and a teacher at
Jordan High School-STARR Academy), \"the cause of the problem is not the kids but
their environment and the socially-created perception of their self-worth. The
concept of \'dumbing down\' puts the sole responsibility for failure on the back of
the student, and furthers the stereotype that drop out is due to a flawed value
system of a youth culture obsessed with image over substance. This does nothing to
speak of administrative bureaucracy that doesn't support teachers in engaging
students with innovative and imaginative pedagogy, nor does it speak of who has the
power to define what is knowledge and intelligence.\"



Web Site = http://www.heyugly.org

Contact Details = Betty Hoeffner
3750 N. Lake Shore Drive, 16D
Chicago, IL 60613
773 348 8681
HeyUGLY411@aol.com

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