Kids working after school and on weekends
The youth labor workforce always shifts a bit once school starts. According to Teenage Research Unlimited, 11 percent of kids 12-15 are working at some sort of regular paid job, 35 percent of 16-17 year olds and 53 percent of 18-19 year olds are working.
Rather than contributing to their “family income,” today’s typical student is likely to find that most or all of his/her earnings are available for discretionary spending. The National Longitudinal Survey of Youth data showed that youth in lower income households tend to work less than do those in households with higher income. Given that some are earning $200 a month, some kids today experience what Jerald Bachman calls “premature affluence.”
Dr. Buchman is a Research Professor and Distinguished Research Scientist at the University of Michigan's Institute for Social Research and has served as a principal investigator on the Monitoring the Future study ever since its inception in 1975. He suggests it’s affluence because “$200 or more per month represents a lot of ‘spending money’ for a high school student, and premature because many of these individuals will not be able to sustain that level of discretionary spending once they have to take on the burdens of paying for their own necessities.” It’s a development of spending style that teens can’t maintain as they move into emerging adulthood. Once they’re on their own, away from the financial base of mom and/or dad, emerging adults have to unlearn the bad spending habits they acquired as teens. Plus, working too many hours after school can endanger their academic performance as well as school- and community-based extracurricular activities.
Permissible and suggested work hours for kids...
Under 14 years old =
Forget working and concentrate on school, family, and other activities
14 to 15 years old =
3 hours maximum on any school day
18 hours maximum in any school week
8 hours maximum on any non-school day (by law, 6 hours maximum by smart parents)
40 hours maximum (by law, 30 hours by smart parents) in any non-sch
Posted by Fran Kick at 9:59:38 AM in Kids @ Work (6)













