Healthy Living for Teens: Inspiring Advice on Diet, Exercise, and Handling Stress
By (Author) Youth Communication
Edited by Al Desetta
Skyhorse Publishing
Sky Pony Press
5th October 2021
United States
Young Adult
Non Fiction
Childrens / Teenage personal and social topics: Positive / good mental health
646.700842
Paperback
168
Width 139mm, Height 209mm, Spine 12mm
181g
In Healthy Living for Teens, young writers show that its possible to overcome badhabits and lead healthy lives in a time when substance abuse,junk food, and low self-esteem and self-worth are major social problems.
Inspire teen and preteen readers to take responsibility for and make wiser decisions about their lives with the essays in this bookeach written by a teenager. Within these pages, Edwin Mercado, Evelyn Gofman, Antwaun Garcia, and many others describe how they got on the right path toward healthy habits, breaking unhealthy ones like smoking, taking drugs, abusing alcohol, or seeking comfort in foods they know are unhealthy.
Essays include:
Through these essays, teen readersas well as their parents, teachers, and caregiverswill pick up new tricks to beating bad habits but will also be provided a much-needed glimpse into how the world looks to our younger generations.
Winner of the Golden Lamp Award
"What a unique, important and completely compelling publication. . . . More than other educational magazines I've seen, this one oozes REALNESS." --Association of American Publishers, on YCteen
"Youth Communication's editorial model focuses on developing stories that allow readers to see themselves in the narrative and encourages them to take steps toward personal change." --Teaching Tolerance Magazine
YCteen publishes true stories by teens, giving readers insight into the issues that matter most in young people's lives. They are headquartered in New York, New York.
Al Desetta has been an editor of Youth Communication's two teen magazines, Foster Care Youth United (now known as Represent) and New Youth Connections. He was also an instructor in Youth Communication's juvenile prison writing program. In 1991, he became the organization's first director of teacher development, working with high school teachers to help them produce better writers and student publications. Prior to working at Youth Communication, Desetta directed environmental education projects in New York City public high schools and worked as a reporter.