Eighty Thousand Adolescents

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adolescence
adolescent social needs analysis
Air Hostess
Author_Bryan H. Reed
Billiards Hall
Billiards Saloons
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community integration studies
County College
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Ford Castle
further education
Girl Friend
Juvenile Delinquency
King George's Jubilee Trust
King George’s Jubilee Trust
Latch Keys
leisure activities
Local Education Authorities
Mixed Clubs
Peckham Health Centre
post-war Britain
postwar British society
pre-Service Movement
Single Sex Organization
social research methods
sociological study
Tap Dancing Class
Town Hall
Unattached Young People
Uniformed Organizations
urban adolescent development
Voluntary Organizations
Voluntary Youth Organizations
War Time
west midlands
Young Christian Workers
Young Man
Youth Advisory Council
youth culture
Youth Employment Service
youth organizations
youth policy
Youth Service
youth service evaluation
youth sociology

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032398204
  • Weight: 370g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Dec 2024
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Eighty Thousand Adolescents, originally published in 1950, illustrated by maps, photographs and diagrams, describes and interprets the results of a study of the young people of Birmingham. This study was made by the staff and students of Westhill Training College, under the direction of Bryan Reed, Youth Tutor. Visits were paid to some hundreds of youth organizations, and answers to a series of questions were given by over a thousand young people, both ‘attached’ and ‘unattached’.

Some of the questions to which the investigators set out to find answers were: In what kind of homes are young people growing up? How do they earn their living? How many take advantage of opportunities for further education? How do they spend their leisure? – and their pocket money? What do they read? What are their emotional, intellectual, spiritual and social needs? and how far do Education Authorities, Clubs, Churches, etc. meets these needs?

In his summing-up Mr. Reed calls attention to the need for imaginative and instructed leadership, for a sense of purpose in the Youth Service, and for the integration of this Service in the wider life of the community. Today it is a fascinating look back at adolescent life in post-war Britain.

Directed and described by Bryan H. Reed

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