Schools & Programs - Boot Camps - Military Bootcamps for Teenagers

Military Bootcamps for Teenagers

Many parents send their teens to military bootcamps for different reasons. Military bootcamps are created initially for the purpose of replacing juvenile prison, with the intent of helping young people get back on track and reduce repeat offenses. These days, military bootcamps for teenagers are not just for first time offenders who are in trouble with the law.

Preparation for Military School
Some teens want to go to military school and think that boot camps will prepare them for this. While it's true that military schools encourage students to participate in military exercises, it's not really a requirement for all students. The daily routine and schedule that military bootcamps for teens keep is nothing like the structure that students in military schools are encouraged to keep.

What would help students' chances of getting into military schools is increasing their grades, joining extracurricular activities that improve one's leadership skills, or help out in community projects. Military high schools can be a good preparation for military academy. It's important to always keep a high standard of excellence and to have this reflect in other facets of your life.

Preparation for Military Boot Camp
Teens who are planning to go into military recruitment boot camps can benefit from military bootcamps for teenagers because the daily routine and drills are patterned after military camps. It's also a great way to get a feel of what military camps will be like because most boot camps for teens let campers wear uniforms, authority figures in the camp also wear uniforms and everybody has military titles.

Solution for Troubled Teens
Some bootcamps for teens are being advertised as a quick fix for troubled teens, which could be quite an attractive idea to parents. However, many mental health and behavioral experts argue that troubled teens need something more than just being intimidated or scared into good behavior. Troubled teens need counseling and therapy, and a positive family environment. There are many other alternative treatments that young people can benefit from, especially those that really aim to bring back these troubled young people to their family. Bootcamps for teens also don't usually offer aftercare programs or even probationary programs to keep an eye out on teens and see to it that they are coping well with their adjustment in school and their community.

It would also be a good idea to explore therapeutic boarding schools as a means to stabilize troubled teens first before sending them back home or to boarding school. Many mental health experts will agree that troubled teens sent to military bootcamps for teenagers lack the maturity needed to take away valuable life lessons from the experience without help. Add to that the fact that troubled teens may develop an unhealthy resentment or fear of authority figures while in boot camp rather than truly tackle the issues that are challenging them in life.

Military bootcamps for teenagers can be effective or ineffective, depending on what your purpose is for enrolling your teen in them. In some cases, they may do more harm than good. It's important to understand what goes on in these bootcamps and be able to clarify your expectations before you commit to it.

 


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