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Are you proud of being a filipino adolescent?why? support your answer​

Sagot :

Answer:

Yes I am proud to be a Filipino

Explanation:

Seeing every Filipino ready to help each other is inspiring and enough to feel proud to be a Filipino. Beyond resilience, adaptability and having courage to face very difficult times, us Filipinos have shown that we are also most compassionate, selflessly eager and always ready to help anybody in need.

Other information:

The term “Filipino” is originally meant a Spaniard born of Spanish parents in the Philippines. The name was given to distinguish them as a foreign-born and not a peninsular Spaniards. ... Then, “Filipino” name only begun to be applied to the Malay Filipino towards the end of the Spanish regime.

Answer:

yes

Explanation:

Filipino adolescents value companionship support. This kind of support is not as threshed out as other Western typologies. The closest kind of support, emotional support, conveys overtures of comfort and care on the occasions when the recipient faces a particular problem.

Companionship support seems to suggest that, for Filipino adolescents, support does not even have to be directed towards the problem at hand. Just spending time together is categorized as supportive as well. This may be influenced by the value of group harmony or pakikisama. Filipinos fear being the odd man out; to be isolated is like being ostracized.

Role of parents and siblings

Filipino adolescents are also found to relate with many sources of social support, with different social support providers perceived as having a particular niche in terms of the kind of social support they provide. After the peers, the Filipino mother consistently ranks second in terms of a boy’s source of almost all kinds of social support. It appears that a mother provides a dynamic spectrum in terms of the variety of support she gives.

Filipino siblings are sources of different kinds of support, but most notably in the area of emotional challenge. This means that siblings have the niche of provoking and disputing their sibling’s values and beliefs, even more so than mother and father.