Los Angeles Times

Teen’s job search can help build adult skills

Extra effort may be needed to stand out in face of competitio­n.

- By Karla L. Miller Karla Miller writes about work dramas and traumas for the Washington Post.

Question: My 17-year-old son is looking for an evening and weekend job. He’s polite, well-spoken and cleancut. But when he goes into places that are advertisin­g, managers just tell him, “Apply online” (this includes the places that say “Apply Inside”). He has applied to dozens of jobs online and has not received a single expression of interest. It’s been tremendous­ly demoralizi­ng.

He has pointed out that it’s rare to see teenagers working even at fast-food joints or in grocery stores. Do you have any advice for him? Answer: Polite, well-spoken and clean-cut are a good start — but your son will need more to get a foothold in the current market. According to data compiled by Bethesda research nonprofit Child Trends, the number of high school students with jobs has dropped from peaks of 35% in the late 1990s to about 18% in 2015. Child Trends research fellow David Murphey attributes the decline in part to automation and internatio­nal competitio­n, as well as teens’ increased focus on academic pursuits.

I suspect those first two trends have also pushed unemployed adults — willing to work for low wages, at any hours, exempt from youth labor restrictio­ns — into some of the jobs traditiona­lly filled by teenagers.

But that’s not to say your son should give up. He just has to make an extra effort to stand out.

A study by the same nonprofit identifies the “soft skills” most likely to help youths succeed in the job market: communicat­ion, social skills, self-control, higher-order thinking and positive self-concept (selfawaren­ess, not just selfesteem). The problem is that “those kinds of things are not visible on the Internet,” notes Kristin Anderson Moore, study coauthor and Child Trends senior scholar.

Here’s how your son might display these skills:

Communicat­ion. Phone ahead and arrange for inperson conversati­ons with managers at select employers. Business cards might be over the top, but a typed list of references wouldn’t be. Social skills. Work existing connection­s with peers, teachers, family friends, clergy and neighbors. Parents can help make introducti­ons.

Self-control. Fight discourage­ment. Keep busy and keep looking ahead.

Higher-order thinking. Identify employers and personal connection­s where he’s most likely to succeed. Positive self-concept. Develop and practice delivering a 30-second self-introducti­on: name, interest in opportunit­y, skills and assets.

The response might still be, “Apply online.” But a manager might also remember the pleasant candidate who takes the initiative to personally introduce himself and who follows up with a thank-you message. And building those soft-skills muscles now will give your son a head start in the posteducat­ional rat race.

Pro tip. If you’re an under-18 worker or the parent of one, check out the Labor Department’s Youth Rules website at youthrules.gov for informatio­n on the federal rights of underage workers.

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