Parent Connection
Kids and Materialism
7 p.m. Monday, December 18
on Wisconsin Public Television
and WMVS-TV/Milwaukee
Wisconsin Public Television
newist/cesa 7

Materialism

Family Discussion Guide

Hours that Minors May Work in Wisconsin
(School Year)


Today's Marketing and Advertising

Panel of guests



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Previous programs:

12/18/00
Kids and Materialism

10/30/00
Talking with Parents about Self-Injury

3/29/00
Parents and Success in Schools
Discussion Guide

1/11/00
Raising Honorable Children
Discussion Guide

11/15/99
Managing Emotions
Discussion Guide

5/11/99
Fundamental assets children need for healthy growth
Discussion Guide

4/27/99
Setting Limits (Discipline)
Discussion Guide

3/23/99
Testing and Academic Standards
Discussion Guide
image from Parent Connection TV program"Materialism" or "consumerism" is the passion for obtaining "things" that, while they may enhance lives, are not essential for living: expensive clothing, electronics, entertainment, and so on. Adults began to get caught up in this pattern of behavior in the early fifties and it has grown more and more ingrained in our society ever since.

Largely as a result of unparalleled prosperity in the United States during the decade of the nineties, our fixation with buying, according to many experts, is now threatening the well being of many of our children.

Businesses and industries throughout Wisconsin are in critical need of relatively inexpensive labor. Teenagers, with their natural high energy levels and enthusiasm are an ideal and abundant source for that labor.

In turn, the lust today's teens have for "things" and "possessions" leads them to cherish jobs for as many hours per week as they can possibly manage. This provides them with the money they need to buy what's important to them.

And what is important to the great majority?

"Generally they're not saving money for college," says former State Superintendent of Schools Dr. Herbert Grover. "Statistics clearly back that up. They're supporting a materialist life style."

Why do they want what they want? Because of the influence of their parents' lives, because in their peer groups they are "defined by what you own," and, in no small part, because of the enormous influence of today's marketing and advertising aimed directly at them. Since they will account for the expenditure of nearly 160 billion dollars in the year 2000, there is good reason for sellers of goods to enthusiastically pursue teen business.

Of course, in response to such courtship, kids tend to want more and then need to work more to get more money to buy more things.

Ed Lump, Executive VP/CEO of the Wisconsin Restaurant Association, sees that as a positive influence in kids' lives. "I think that materialism can be a positive force. It does give people, individuals, the desire to achieve good things, to do better, to be able to afford the material things that they would like."

A job, though, can have an effect on school. Former Green Bay Superintendent of Schools Lyle Martens has been working with students since 1986. "There were a significant number of kids coming to school and sleeping in class. We found out they were working to buy things not of need but of want. They were buying radios and all this kind of stuff instead of working to save money for college or for some other use."

Lauren Schuster, 18, a good student who is heavily involved in extracurricular activities as well as work, says she is saving money for college. "Working is not so much of an option as a necessity in this day and age, and I think most students my age would agree with that. Thirty thousand dollars a year for college education is not cheap and my parents cannot afford that. It's something that I need to provide for myself and I need to start doing that while I'm in high school."


Materialism

The term "materialism" is not a product of today's society. As a philosophical concept, it dates back to the 6th Century BC. In that context it is a theory that physical matter is the only reality and that everything, including thought, feeling, mind, and will, can be explained in terms of matter and physical phenomena. It denies the existence of spirits, souls, and gods, and it insists that all activities are based on physical properties. It further suggests that physical well being and worldly possessions constitute the greatest good and highest value in life.

Today, the term "materialism" still suggests that "physical well being and worldly possessions" are to be greatly valued in life, if not valued above all else.

The term "consumerism," used today almost interchangeably with "materialism," is a much more recent theory based on the concept that a progressively greater consumption of goods is economically beneficial. Its common connotation is an attachment to materialistic values or possessions.

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