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- <text id=89TT1115>
- <title>
- May 01, 1989: American Ideas
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- May 01, 1989 Abortion
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- AMERICAN IDEAS, Page 12
- Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Giving teenagers a new view of their future by involving adults,
- Michael Carrera helps young people believe in themselves
- </p>
- <p>By Melissa Ludtke
- </p>
- <p> Here was a man out of place. A slender man dressed in a
- stylish business suit, he sat by himself, night after night, in
- the bustling entryway of the Dunlevy Milbank Center in the
- middle of Harlem. His narrow face bore a trusting smile that
- masked a dogged purpose. He was trying to teach a course on
- human sexuality for neighborhood parents, and often nobody came.
- But he kept showing up. Michael Carrera, professor and prophet,
- understood that as a white man and an outsider he needed the
- parents' support if he wanted to come to their community to help
- their kids. "Involving parents is a show of respect," he
- declares. "It says they are valuable, their kids are valuable,
- their family is valuable." After a few months, families knew
- Carrera wasn't going away and that he was there to help. A few
- began to listen and, soon, their kids listened too.
- </p>
- <p> Carrera holds the Thomas Hunter Chair of Health Sciences at
- Hunter College. But it is some 50 blocks uptown, in Harlem
- neighborhoods, where nearly 1 out of every 4 babies is born to
- a teenage mother, that Carrera's teaching is put to its sternest
- test in the Family Life Education and Adolescent Sexuality
- Program, which he created. Pregnancy-prevention courses, Carrera
- argues, are generally too narrow in focus to succeed. His
- approach is holistic, born of a simple premise: Give young
- people a sense of their own promise, and they will not be as
- likely to disrupt their lives with an early pregnancy.
- </p>
- <p> But this simple premise is difficult to execute. "To move
- kids from fatalism to industriousness," says Carrera, "the
- intervention needs to be complex and longstanding." After those
- initial months of intense scrutiny and understandable suspicion,
- Carrera managed to assemble 22 girls and boys, ranging in age
- from 13 to 16, and a smaller group of parents for courses on
- family life and sex education. "The kids are riddled with
- mythology about these things. There is a real need to inform,"
- he says. Before long, the youngsters were not only learning but
- also receiving a range of support services from adults who were
- willing to make a long-term commitment. "For too many of these
- kids, adults have disappeared on them," says Carrera, who has
- remained personally involved with each of the kids and their
- families during the past five years.
- </p>
- <p> Physicians from a local hospital provide comprehensive
- health care. Tutors recruited from the Junior League help with
- homework, and employment counselors place the kids in summer
- jobs. "Many employers have stereotypes of black urban youth,"
- says Mary Kay Penn, who manages the Milbank program. "It is very
- hard to persuade them to take these kids on, even when we pay
- the salary." But last summer Penn placed 75 of the kids in jobs,
- and Carrera added a silk-screening program so they could learn
- to design and sell T shirts.
- </p>
- <p> Though contraception is available -- prescribed by a doctor
- with parental consent -- Carrera knows that access to birth
- control is not enough. "When kids are empowered with information
- and stimulated by hope for the future, it has a contraceptive
- effect," says Carrera. "Education. Employment. Their own bank
- accounts. Good health. Family involvement. Self-esteem. These
- are also contraceptives. It's the total fabric that is
- important." Carrera also teaches them how to play sports, like
- squash, that rely on individual discipline and control.
- "Whenever you posit a single solution to a complex problem, you
- are not as successful as you can be."
- </p>
- <p> Success in Carrera's program brings a substantial reward.
- Under an agreement made with former Hunter College President
- Donna Shalala, students who graduate from high school and
- complete Carrera's program are guaranteed admission to Hunter.
- So far, 15 participants, teens and parents, have enrolled;
- Shavon Glover, a mother at 15, before she met Carrera, was the
- first. "I always had college in the back of my mind, but I
- didn't think I could do it," Glover says. "When I met Mike,
- everything started lifting up."
- </p>
- <p> Since his initial success at the Milbank Center, Carrera
- has expanded his program to include two other community centers
- in Harlem, one of which is in a predominantly Hispanic
- neighborhood. Carrera receives financial support from New York
- City's Childrens Aid Society and devotes many hours each week
- to fund raising from private as well as public sources. The cost
- for each teenager is about $1,500 a year, and the paid staff
- members are all indigenous to the community. "Most adolescent
- pregnancy programs are headed by white female social workers,"
- says Cary Dixon, a 48-year-old black man who teaches the
- family-life course to boys at the Frederick Douglass housing
- project.
- </p>
- <p> Dixon serves as a crucial role model, particularly for the
- many boys who don't have fathers at home. "When I grew up,
- families were there to teach kids that there are certain
- boundaries," he recalls. "Now there is no discipline in their
- lives. Kids' lives are like basketball played without lines."
- He believes Carrera's approach holds promise. "By keeping these
- kids on a clear education track, by having them understand the
- importance of delaying pregnancy and by including parents, Mike
- is doing what others aren't," he says.
- </p>
- <p> In all, about 225 kids and 75 parents are participating in
- Carrera's three Harlem-based programs. Carrera's track record
- is impressive. In four years only two girls have become pregnant
- and, as far as the counselors can tell from their intimate
- weekly individual discussions with the kids, only one boy has
- fathered a child. "This is not a value-free program," he
- explains. "We have a message that delaying sexual activity is
- good. We are taking a stand." This year the Childrens Aid
- Society is establishing the Stern National Training Center for
- Family Life Education in Manhattan, where Carrera will teach his
- techniques to others searching for ways to cope with adolescent
- pregnancy in their community.
- </p>
- <p> "The message is that if you expect changes in kids, you
- have to be in for the long haul," Carrera warns. "That is
- necessary to overcome the myths and go up against the
- stereotypes that surround these kids' lives." So far, Carrera
- has managed against great odds to outlast all those who said it
- can't be done. To do it, he had to learn how to overcome the
- everyday frustrations that inevitably accompany adolescent
- struggles. He calls his technique "patient endurance."
- </p>
- <p> But Carrera also is energized by memories of his own
- youthful struggles and of adults who helped him find his way.
- His beliefs in the power of family and of public service are
- woven from the fibers of his childhood. Born a half-century ago
- in the Bronx to immigrant parents, a house painter and a
- patternmaker, he found his role models in an attentive and
- extended Italian family. "I found there is strength in family,"
- says Carrera, who was the first in his family to graduate from
- college, and ultimately earned a doctorate from Columbia
- University. Along the way he taught junior high students in the
- Bronx, and there he discovered his calling. "It was clear to me
- how poorly these kids were treated," he recalls. "I saw how
- responsive they were to being around a caring adult, how that
- would get them turned on to other things, such as learning."
- </p>
- <p> Now that he can, Carrera gratefully gives something back to
- kids. "These kids don't often have someone saying they can do
- things. Instead there always seem to be barriers put in their
- way," he says. "So we're going to be the ones to say, `We're
- glad you're here. You can do it.'"
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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