Walking down a school hallway, one is guaranteed to hear slang being used by nearly all the students. This is because slang is one of the most popular forms of communication, especially among youth. However, there is much debate over whether slang should be banned in school. Banning slang is schools could have consequences and lead to separation among students. Slang should be allowed in schools because it is an easy and fun way for students to communicate with each other, it establishes commonality among students, and banning slang could potentially alienate students. Although slang should not be banned, it is important for students to learn when it is appropriate to use slang. Slang provides a sense of identity and commonality among students. The use of certain slang words or phrases suggest "membership in the same …show more content…
While this "tribe" may be a majority of youth or just a small group of friends, slang can still allow students to feel included. Students will feel more comfortable around people who use the same words or phrases as them. People in general are constantly trying to find ways to relate and connect with others. Slang allows people, mainly teenagers, to relate with one another using language. Therefore, slang can help form friendships among students and create a friendly environment at schools. The slang students use to connect with others also gives them a sense of identity. A person's identity is heavily associated with the people they relate to and spend time with. Essentially, a student's "tribe" can reflect their identity. Teenagers are the group that struggle the most with finding their identity as they grow into adults. Since teenagers are in a constant battle to find their identity, the use
Despite that students now use profanity in their public schools and even more out of school, this could cause more children and teens to use the offensive language around their peers.
Adolescence is a time when everything we've ever known is being changed. Relationships, friends, thoughts, and other things that shape who we are become more awkward and confusing and are changed from what they have been in the past. Consequently, we will change also because all these things shape who we are. During a period of such change, it's hard to know who we really are. Adolescence is the time when we find out who we truly are, but not until we know who we aren't. Adolescents use common words, actions, and rivalries to try to define their unique personalities, goals, and ideas. They label
In James Howell’s “Gangs in America’s Communities” book he mentions that a gang should be looked at more of as a social network rather than an “organization” (Howell, 2012, p.60). This can be especially true for the youth who get involved in gangs. For the youth it is normal for them to want to belong somewhere so their peers have major influences in what they do and even how they think. The emergence or involvement of a gang among youth is identifying with each other and eventually giving themselves a name. Howell then describes the next step as grasping the gang culture by wearing distinctive clothing, colors, having rituals, gatherings, and the exclusion of other youth. Most youth join gangs between the ages of 11 and 15, the peak of gang involvement usually occurs between the age of 14 to 16. Some of the risk factors that get them involved in a
Sometimes it may be appropriate to use slang with your peers but in normal working with colleagues or service users you should avoid using any language that can be misunderstood or misinterpreted or that might cause offence.
In his research Jay Macleod, compares two groups of teenage boys, the Hallway Hangers and the Brothers. Both groups of teenagers live in a low income neighborhood in Clarendon Heights, but they are complete opposites of each other. The Hallway Hangers, composed of eight teenagers spend most of their time in the late afternoon or early evening hanging out in doorway number 13 until very late at night. The Brothers are a group of seven teenagers that have no aspirations to just hang out and cause problems, the Brothers enjoy active pastimes such as playing basketball. The Hallway Hangers all smoke, drink, and use drugs. Stereotyped as “hoodlums,” “punks,” or “burnouts” by outsiders, the Hallway Hangers are actually a varied group, and much
Youths frequently use language, dress, musical tastes, along with other symbols to differentiate themselves using their company categories of adolescents. Gangs represent a definite kind of relationship and therefore have distinct symbols and traditions. These symbols are essential for the reason that they function as a method of determining fellow gang people and rival gang people. Additionally they be the method for attaining or maintaining status inside the gang.
High School culture has changed since the “old days.” Students from all grades are not only striving for academic success, but also participate in many extracurricular activities as outside forces continue to impact social life. With this comes the typical struggles of students figuring out who they are, and what kind of person they want to become as college becomes a daunting factor.
Around the world today, there are 2,700 languages with over 7,000 individual dialects spoken. The English language alone has approximately 171,476 words and throughout the day, a person utilizes around 16,000 of them. Walking through a crowded school hallway decorated with banners and filled with chatter, every once in awhile a person hears a snippet of someone else’s conversation. Two teenage boys stand by a group of lockers, a few words made out include- “slut” and “whore.” Walking further into the school, a group of students pass by, one of them calling out to another with a racial slur. Turning the corner before entering a classroom, another group of students blast a rap filled with violent lyrics and degrading comments.
Identity is formed through the mutual trends of a group through slang and is used as identification for users who have these lexical features in common. The shortening of the lexeme whatever to “whatevz” or the reduplication and shortening of “crazy” to “cray cray” are words that have appealed to young Australian teenagers. Through use of diminutives, identity can be further formed as they are uniquely Australian, where lexemes are shortened to a syllable and the suffix of –ie, -y or –o is added like “smoko” for smoking, “devo” for devastated and “bottle-o” for a liquor store. The use of slang like this enhances our identity and care free nature that helps us understand phrases like “I’m devo that brekky at Maccas is done”. This way slang builds certain characteristics that are known to Australians in the same way phonological features have.
High school sport injuries have become such a common incident. Precautions are not taken as
When people develop different hobbies, or play different sports, they learn the terminology used in those groups in order to fit in. To begin, while playing sports, members must learn the “language” of that sport in order to understand what the coach is trying to teach or tell him or her. When a new person joins a new team or club, they do not understand what the people in this group are talking about. These new languages must be learned, and then used only during the right times. If a tennis player uses terms used at tennis at home,
Also sometimes I use slang words when speaking with my friends. The slang words I use are usually words I pick up from friends. I use these words when I am speaking so I feel closer to them and l accepted, as I speak like one of them. I would never use slang in front of my parents because of the way I fear they may see me. In culture using slang words gives the impression that you are unintelligent and uneducated.
Gang Culture has increasingly become a subculture for many teenage youths. Mainly minority teens, these social outcast are often have no real economic stability and no parental supervision or guidance. As a result, teenagers often rebel and seek comfort in gangs. These gangs provide what is lacking in their lives, a sense of belonging. Minorities are often stereotyped and criticized, especially minorities born into poverty. They are condemned simply because they are not of the same race or of the same class as the majority (often middle class whites). Before these minorities can even prove themselves equal, society already pushes them towards the subculture that has risen out of oppression and rebellion. Gang culture reinforces, and in
When incarcerated you have to learn the prison slang to survive. Understanding prison slang was mandatory to survive in prison; the inmates had to learn this langue because it was vital to communicate efficiently with other inmates. Inmates knew if they used the word “Punk or Niggas” there would be a fight if you weren’t close with a black inmate.
Language has gradually advanced over many millions of years. Slang has developed, and other cultures languages and quirks have made their way in, and it has become one. Language has a way of shaping our identities, and personal cultures. It brings us together, and sometimes it even makes us move apart.