Anonymous wrote:I own a small business, the sort which has positions that are frequently recommended for teen summer jobs. But I'm sorry, we never ever hire high school kids. There are just too many adults who have to provide for families who are desperate for these "no skill" jobs (even if they are educated) and do them well.
Anonymous wrote:My 17 yo has worked 12 hours per week at a grocery store throughout this school year, and 30 hours this coming summer. DC will work there during college breaks next year as well. Not all jobs in grocery stores go to adults. They just go to people who will make a commitment and be reliable and trainable.
It is the favorite part of DC's week. DC has learned so much.
BTW, we are affluent. And DC could simply be given money by us, but I cannot emphasize enough how important real work has been to self-confidence, independence, skill development, work ethic. There are carry overs to other parts of life and school. DC now has things to put on a resume and has work references. The whole concept of getting direct deposit set up into an account and using a debit/ATM card to get money out has been useful too. The only money in that account is earned money, not gifted. There is a lot of quiet pride for DC with that.
There will be times in the future for DC to be self employed (selling candy...or anything else!) and/or professionally employed outside the home. But there is no replacement for a real job where you work on a team and have a supervisor etc. and that is what DC is learning.
Anonymous wrote:My 17 yo has worked 12 hours per week at a grocery store throughout this school year, and 30 hours this coming summer. DC will work there during college breaks next year as well. Not all jobs in grocery stores go to adults. They just go to people who will make a commitment and be reliable and trainable.
It is the favorite part of DC's week. DC has learned so much.
BTW, we are affluent. And DC could simply be given money by us, but I cannot emphasize enough how important real work has been to self-confidence, independence, skill development, work ethic. There are carry overs to other parts of life and school. DC now has things to put on a resume and has work references. The whole concept of getting direct deposit set up into an account and using a debit/ATM card to get money out has been useful too. The only money in that account is earned money, not gifted. There is a lot of quiet pride for DC with that.
There will be times in the future for DC to be self employed (selling candy...or anything else!) and/or professionally employed outside the home. But there is no replacement for a real job where you work on a team and have a supervisor etc. and that is what DC is learning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you all think of my taking my 17 y/o nephew (who really wants a job and can't find one the conventional way) to BJs and buying some candy bars, snacks, etc and have him go around the neighborhood selling them?
No scam, no selling for charity spiel, etc. Just a young teen trying to make a couple dollars filling your sweet tooth. Thoughts?
I don't think it's good. I never buy from those people, and wouldn't even open the door to him if he rang the bell. I don't know where that candy's been, what the money's going towards, and I always wonder why kids that age don't go get a retail job or a camp counselor job like I did when I was that age. Seriously, wtf? When I was 14 I was a camp counselor during the day, worked as a cashier at a supermarket after camp (4-7 on week days and 7am to 12pm on weekend mornings), plus I'd babysit nights. Why isn't he doing that? Tons of people, especially single moms of little boys, would hire a male babysitter especially one who's already been vetted to be a camp counselor.
Anonymous wrote:What do you all think of my taking my 17 y/o nephew (who really wants a job and can't find one the conventional way) to BJs and buying some candy bars, snacks, etc and have him go around the neighborhood selling them?
No scam, no selling for charity spiel, etc. Just a young teen trying to make a couple dollars filling your sweet tooth. Thoughts?
Anonymous wrote:What do you all think of my taking my 17 y/o nephew (who really wants a job and can't find one the conventional way) to BJs and buying some candy bars, snacks, etc and have him go around the neighborhood selling them?
No scam, no selling for charity spiel, etc. Just a young teen trying to make a couple dollars filling your sweet tooth. Thoughts?
Anonymous wrote:I've seen a few threads asking what jobs a young teen can do to earn a little pocket money.
AND, I've seen lots of threads asking where someone can get photos scanned to disk...
Just puttin' two and two together here!![]()