Ignore all the "the problem is you" crap, that's not why I shared this article. It's a society-wide issue.The usual points:
-parents think it's too dangerous for their kids to roam
-curfews, loitering laws
-fewer truly public spaces and more regimented after-school activities
Better points that reddit added:
-suburban sprawl lengthens the distance between kids; no more neighborhood atmosphere
-gas prices
-a lot of entertainment 18+ these days
-this leaves underage drinking and drugs as attractive options
- It's more than that.
Picture this: You're a 14 year old kid. Not old enough for a license, too old to think hanging out with the parents on weekend nights is fun.
It's 8:30pm. Where do you go? What do you do? There's the mall, but that's not necessarily appealing all the time, because there isn't a lot to actually do there, and it closes at 9 in most places. The movies are an option, but how is that different from sitting at home on your computer? At least there you aren't spending $8 for popcorn and you can chat to your friends at the same time. Arcades don't really exist anymore thanks to the power of modern gaming. A lot of outdoorsy activities are going to be dark at this time.
Even a 17 year old with a car... there just aren't many places to go unless you live in an urban area with a lot of culture. And many of those places cater to the alcohol drinking crowd.
This all more or less rings true to me inre: growing up semi-suburban. I was lucky enough to have some walking distance friends, friends with shitty cars, friends with "cool" parents etc. Nonetheless I ran into all of the problems above. It's not enough to be an open-minded, adventurous teenager anymore -- you have to manage to network with the three other people your age in your zipcode that you might really connect with. A lot harder now. Potentially a lot easier with AIM and Xbox live.
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I should note, this post was submitted here last month by minimum_wage, but the discussion there was more about the parenting aspect of this. I'd rather get your opinion on the following question: is it true that it's harder for teenagers to be social offline in the 21st century because of fundamental changes in society over the last 30 years? What are your personal experiences?
Teenager here. I can't bike down the street at night and throw pebbles at a girl's window, nor can I sneak out of the house in the dark and go to the party down by the lake. These teenage movie utopias are not a reality-- at least not today. I don't see my friends out of school, and if I do it's in the basement of a pair of ignorant parents, and I'm wading through vomit and unconscious white kids. Otherwise, I'm sitting at home, swimming in the fears, anxieties, and responsibilities of the modern kid. We're studying all day to be pushed into the 'real world' with a sticker saying "I successfully followed orders." Drugs, alcohol, parties, they're media for escape. Hanging out has been diluted to a chance to get the fuck out of the house. I genuinely feel like I have no choice but to message my friend on Facebook instead of meeting for lunch. Our life, our school system does not give us the time and opportunity to discover and interact with the world. It gives us busy work to stay out of trouble and focus on our priorities. By that I mean, the priorities we were assigned. So, cue the internet. A reflection of the real world in its hulking, gargantuan entirety. Fast. Really fast. Ideas thoughts data flowing in and out 24 hours a day, subcultures springing up like mushrooms and
a community for everyone. Freedom. The Real World, and the icing on the cake is that its sitting in my lap, covered by my bio textbook. The answer is, it doesnt matter that the internet is easier than the coffee shop.It's simply that the internet is everything, its all of it, and with our friends constantly signed in, we can pretend its all we could possibly want. I don't think you can deny the disparity in online communication in comparison to looking someone in the face. There's nothing quite like talking to somebody, in fact the very act of typing in a chat is the use of text as a substitution and representation of actual speech. It's not the same, and us 'teenagers' know that. But the pace of the world isn't going to skip a beat for us to fit in an hour or two for the movies. If it ever does, you bet we'll seize the chance and go overboard and get shitfaced at aparty instead, every single time. In the mean time, we'll be checking our notifications.
Dude, life is about choices. If you want to sneak out of the house and hang out with friends till the sun comes up, then I say do it. This is the biggest joke that will be ever played on you: The real world is indifferent to your school-aged 'accomplishments'. I barely graduated public high school (while disobeying as many directives from my supposed superiors as I possibly could--sometimes just for the fun of it), and I have an awesome life now at age 31. I literally couldn't ask for anything more than I have. And I did it all on my own terms. The founder of this site, mk, has a saying (and it's the main philosophy of Hubski in general), "Each of us helps to create the world we live in." (Or something similar.) Fuck the world you're given; make it up as you go. Or, as Cat Stevens wrote, "If you want to sing out, sing out, and if you want to be free, be free." The internet can be informative, engaging, educational, and many other good things, but it's not fucking freedom. Don't confuse the them. Live, son. That's good advice.We're studying all day to be pushed into the 'real world'...
I'm a teenager too, and I would love to be "free" like you describe, but what could I do with my freedom? None of my friends equally yearn to attain such freedom, or if they do, they don't let on that they do, possibly due to societal pressure. Society feels like it's structured like a series of obstacles preventing me from doing whatever I want, and I feel like I'd be alone, like Clarisse McClellan taking a walk by herself. I don't see the Internet as freedom, but I don't see other options available. Then there's also the issue of short-term gains. Isn't getting into the best college I can the best way for me to have a successful life? Do I want to have the most fun in my life as a teenager? I know that you think that being successful later in life and having fun as a teenager aren't mutually exclusive, but perhaps your case is an exception? But then, I guess the definition of success is dependent on the mindset of the successful individual. Happiness is a mindset, as they say, not something to be achieved. But to me, success is the achievement of the goals you've set, and for me to achieve my goals, I need to get into a really good college (I think), or else I will have denied myself opportunities to go down the road I want to take, working for a (and founding my own) startup, or an equally exciting tech company. Indeed, one of my goals is to be financially independent enough to do whatever I'd like. I wish there was a way for me to be able to do whatever I'd like right now without disrupting the path to achieving my goals, but there just isn't. It sucks, but that's reality as I see it.
In my opinion, your position is entirely rational and is probably the best reflection of the conditions on the ground. That said, parents have, for generations, given kids the impression that if they don't do everything exactly right they will be thrown into the Pit of Despair and it's just not true. In part, it's parental nervousness - you don't want your kids to limit their own options. In part, it's a reflection of the diminished insight and increased aggression of adolescents (not their fault - there really is one last organic re-jiggering of the synapses during adolescence that explains a lot of teen behavior). In any event, yeah it's good not to limit your options. At the same time, they're options, not The FateHammer. Flagamuffin is right - fear debt. However, debt often means opportunity. A balance can be struck. You're gonna be fine, yo.
I don't think so. The only thing exceptional about me is that I recognized at a much earlier age than most people that you're continually lied to as a kid. I went to a university that no one's ever heard of after going to community college for two years, and I have a better career going that many people who went to Ivy league schools to become scientists. It's all about taking the bull by the horns and going after what you want. No one is going to look at your resume, see you went to Stanford, and hand you a job. Because nobody gives a fuck in the real world. People are going to meet you, and judge you as a person. All that said, the best reason to go to a reputable school is to get better business contacts. That's something that's hard to replicate at a small, unknown, not-so-selective university.I know that you think that being successful later in life and having fun as a teenager aren't mutually exclusive, but perhaps your case is an exception?
AHHHH Attend the university that is the best combination of cheap and accredited -- and then never think about the other alternatives. Fear debt.Then there's also the issue of short-term gains. Isn't getting into the best college I can the best way for me to have a successful life?
Yes, and well managed debt can lead to great credit which is FAR more important than anyone young ever realizes. -At least I didn't.
Mmm, that's true of course, but "do some research before taking on debt" isn't how young college students choose which beyond-their-means college they're going to attend. Investing in debt is all well and good when you have a job or a financial base to fall back on. Most young accruers of debt -- I'd imagine 99 percent -- do it for the wrongest of reasons. There are also other ways to have a good credit score.
I think you have a good basis for your argument. Debt gets out of hand very easily. I got two credit cards between the age of 19 and 22 - thank god the card I got at 19 only had a $500 limit because that was maxed and stayed maxed for a very long time. I mean, don't get me wrong, I made my payments regularly and so on - even when I lost my job and had no employment for several months, and I was very proud of the fact that I managed to make all those payments (still am) - but when you have, say, a $2,500 limit card, it does feel like you have just a little extra cash lying around and you can "splurge." Suddenly a week of splurging becomes $500 or more on a card - I am not great at going from one extreme to another, so "a splurge just for today" becomes "I'm used to spending extra money" - similar problems with food - and then before you know it both your cards are nearly at their limit, or whatever. This is especially hard when you are especially young, although the CARD Act should help with some of this. There are other ways to have a good credit score, but few are as simple as maintaining a credit card, if you have the ability and financial responsbility to do so.
I've got more than personal experiences, I've got book learnin'. And I'll probably read this book - because that's really what this "opinion" piece is, a puff piece to pump up book sales. So here's my breakdown based on what I've read, what I've observed, and what I've surmised: 1) "Digital natives, ettiquette be damned, kids don't know how to interact anymore." Gonna agree with this one. People learn to navigate the waters their boat is on. Kids and teens these days are required to be Facebook literate in the extreme. There's no real way to leave school at school; Facebook makes that social sphere a constant experience. Given 24 hours in a day, some of which must be spent sleeping, if you're giving over an extra hour a day to managing your online profile, that's an hour less per day you can give over to meatspace socialization. Sociologists will also point to teenage years as the time when people are most likely to experiment with identity; this is far, far easier online than it is in person. Inherent in this discussion is the judgement that online interaction is less valuable than interpersonal interaction. I think that depends on what value we're judging. If we're talking about "happiness" then I think it's fair to say that yes, the kids are getting cheated. If we're talking about "culture" then I think it's more accurate to say that the kids are going a different way than their parents. It's a thinner, bleaker world but it's still a world. Sherry Turkle has made a 30-year career out of studying exactly this at MIT. 2) "Blame the parents." Well, don't blame the kids. They're adapting to an arbitrary ruleset they had no say in crafting. Parents, for their part, largely act in self-interest (so long as you understand the Elizabeth Stone quote: "Having children is like letting your heart walk around outside of your body"). Parents follow societal cues - as they say, kids don't come with an instruction manual, so most parenting is guided by peer pressure. And peer pressure has, increasingly, been about paranoia. Lenore Ashkenazy (the 9-year-old on the NY Subway lady wrote a great book called Free Range Kids that basically breaks down the 31 flavors of paranoia that have seeped in and turned parenting into a horror movie. Long story short, she blames America's Most Wanted. Start on pp. 16; you can "search inside." I can think of three different kids that got lost in the woods whose searches dragged on days longer because their parents told them "not to talk to strangers." As a consequence, they actively avoided their rescuers despite being alone, hungry and dehydrated in the woods for multiple days. Now - do you blame the parents for that? Or do you make a snap judgement that anybody who tells their kids to go ahead and talk to strangers is a social deviant? 3) "The result, Boyd discovered, is that today’s teens have neither the time nor the freedom to hang out." There's a Daily Mail article (yeah) called "How Children Lost The Right To Roam in 4 Generations." This graphic used to go with it: A lot more homework is assigned these days. The focus is on standardized tests. Social media is a necessity. Is everyone so overbooked that they have no time for anything but Facebook and PSATs? Well, sounds like white people problems to me, but Frontline did a pretty goddamn good job of summarizing the problems back in 2008. I wholeheartedly recommend watching it. 4) "Forget the empathy problem—these kids crave seeing friends in person." I'm gonna go ahead and call bullshit on this one. So would Sherry Turkle. So would Frontline. There has never been a generation of teenagers since the invention of the teenager (a largely Post-WWII phenomenon) that has not gotten what they wanted by hook or by crook. Teenagers are not hanging out the way teenagers used to hang out because they have found other acceptable means. Now - did parents and society create those acceptable means? YES. Are the conditions on the ground such that teenagers cannot differentiate between the signals-poor environment of online interaction and the syntactically and symbolism-rich environment of interpersonal contact? YES. Whose fault is that? WHO CARES? We probably oughtta try and fix it rather than point fingers. Particularly at parents who, if my experiences with my friends and myself are any indication, are mostly just trying not to screw up so hard. Fuck you for blaming me. I'm just trying to keep her from becoming a serial killer and here you are laying the woes of the world at my feet because I bought her an iPhone. Eat a dick, Wired.
I think it also depends on who we're judging. I've 'met' a lot of social outcasts on the internet. Some people just aren't capable of interpersonal interaction because of mental makeup or what have you, and previously maybe they didn't have any alternatives. Now they can shack up with other people like them on the internet, where things that make interpersonal relationships click are deemphasized. You can argue that it's a bad thing that we cater to people like that when we should be teaching them to be sociable, but I think the reverse is true, that it's a good thing they can have any interactions at all. So I guess the internet can turn potential loners that were never going to have much 'real' interaction to begin with into people with friends, online or not. Very generalized, but you get the gist. It was a shitty article, perfectly apt for truereddit. Blame shouldn't even enter the equation. I merely wanted opinions on whether their thesis was true. I read that Daily Mail article, I think it was linked in the comments. I had an atypical childhood as far as freedoms, but I still find myself reflexively noticing and wondering whenever I see a kid who looks <10 by themselves. Especially if they're near a street with cars. This reflexivity makes me think it's a societal issue rather than a parental one -- I'm not a parent, but I still have certain thought-patterns which I acknowledge are silly but continue to have. So a final question: is it something to "fix," as you say? On the face of it seems obvious that kids should have freedoms not limited by overbearing society and stupid curfews and expensive cars, but you make the convincing argument above that teenagers are the ones driving this trend. If they are, who are we to try and fix it?Inherent in this discussion is the judgement that online interaction is less valuable than interpersonal interaction. I think that depends on what value we're judging.
Ignore all the "the problem is you" crap, that's not why I shared this article.
Breaking this down into excessively simple terms: Let's take ten people. Two of them are extroverts, two of them are reserved extroverts, two of them are reserved, two of them are outgoing introverts, and two of them are introverts. Note that by "introvert" and "extrovert" I do not mean "people who choose or don't choose to interact with others" as I should - I mean "people who can or can't smoothly interact with others." there's probably a better word. Humor me. Prior to the internet, the extroverts had lots of interaction. The reserved guys had a modicum of interaction. The introverts didn't interact that much. However, chances are good that the introverts were interacting with the extroverts simply because the extroverts interact more. So in any engagement, the introverts are interacting with people who are good at interaction. After the internet, the extroverts have lots of interaction. The reserved guys have a modicum of interaction. The introverts may very well be interacting more - but they're also interacting more with other introverts. Without a value judgement on it, the interaction they're getting is definitely of another quality than what they would have gotten otherwise. So the question is this: are people A) better off with minimal interactions among people who are socially adroit? B) better off marinating in the culture of /b/? I don't think that we can answer this question easily and succinctly. I do think that in a society where the adroit are calling the shots, the /b/tards are at serious disadvantage. And, until the Internet becomes substantially more important than, well, everything else in life, the adroit will continue to call the shots. "Well put," said the 3-year moderator of r/foodforthought. ;-) At the age of sixteen, I once called home and left "Hey, it's me, I'm in Dallas, I'll be back by Monday" on the answering machine. Yet I'm of a like mind. My primary objection to the article, and I suspect my primary objection to the book (which I do intend to read) is that it's an attempt to put one factor at the root of many problems. I read Free Range Kids and I've given it as a gift three or four times. Bringing up BeBe is similarly countercultural in that it wholeheartedly suggests de-emphasizing the importance of children to the benefit of children and parents alike. Let me clarify that point a little bit. Soviet teenagers wore Levi's. I have a friend who grew up in Samarkand watching bootleg American videos they paid for with equally bootleg Marlboros. Choice will find a way. The article basically makes the point that kids would love to be as normal as their parents, but their goose-stepping, paranoid parents won't let them. I'd argue that if Soviet kids can lead rock'n'roll lifestyles, over-pampered 'tweeners in Minneapolis can, too. But they aren't. And that's the important thing - I don't think there's a lack of drive, I think there's a lack of motivation. Kids aren't socializing the same way their forebears did because they've found alternatives. Those alternatives, as argued here, there and everywhere, are a poor substitute for what came before, but the kids don't know enough to reject them. Which means that yes - "the teenagers are driving this trend" but at the same time, they're kids. We don't let them vote, we don't let them drink, we don't let them rent a car, we don't let them join the army, we don't recognize their first amendment rights. Sherry Turkle and others have argued that without a conscious effort to re-socialize social media, an entire generation will suffer a degeneration of their socialization skills. That's my biggest beef with Reddit, by the way. I've gone around and around with them about how to make their universe more social, more human. They don't give a shit. Probably because they're just kids, and they're part of the problem.Some people just aren't capable of interpersonal interaction because of mental makeup or what have you, and previously maybe they didn't have any alternatives.
It was a shitty article, perfectly apt for truereddit.
I had an atypical childhood as far as freedoms, but I still find myself reflexively noticing and wondering whenever I see a kid who looks <10 by themselves.
So a final question: is it something to "fix," as you say?
but you make the convincing argument above that teenagers are the ones driving this trend. If they are, who are we to try and fix it?
Regarding your introvert/extrovert thought experiment, what answer would we get if we asked the group in question whether they prefer being in A or B? Which choice is objectively better is (maybe) different than which they themselves would choose. I couldn't agree more -- I've seen this play out so many times -- unfortunately I have more pressing things on my booklist than books about parenting, which is not a hobby I'm taking up anytime soon, so I'll have to shelve that book for now. Looks entertaining. As for your clarification ... I get what you mean. Lack of motivation. The next generation will quite possibly have even less.Bringing up BeBe is similarly countercultural in that it wholeheartedly suggests de-emphasizing the importance of children to the benefit of children and parents alike.
I think that it's true. I also think that the societal changes affect everyone, but that it really hits teenagers the hardest. In general, I think that car culture is also a huge contributor to this. Another contributor to isolation is that American culture places an inordinate emphasis on winning, an emphasis that is inappropriately applied to nearly every aspect of our culture. The problem with the emphasis on winning, is that if one isn't winning or a winner, then one is losing or a loser. That's a lot of pressure and I think it fucks people up on a fundamental level. After all, now more than ever, teenagers are aware of the perceived necessity of going to university and likely grad school, or some other kind of post-undergrad training, in order to "be competitive". When this is coupled with the goal of winning, it can very easily undermine social relationships. Personally, I was growing up just as AIM was taking off and while ICQ was still present in people's lives. What it did was allow me and my friends to coordinate our activities out of earshot or our parent's knowledge. I guess what I'm getting at is, it seemed to encourage us to be more secretive than we might otherwise have been, because we had the opportunity to be. This is a trend I see continuing with my cousin's kids, even if my cousin is a pretty cool parent. What bothers me about being secretive, is that it allows people's shyness, (say for example, of having a crush on someone and working up the courage to ask that person out) the opportunity to thrive, instead of forcing people to grow thicker skin. Overall, I think people need to get back to having a lot of face to face social interaction in their lives, especially because it is so very easy to render others into abstract beings and for errors in attribution as to other's motives, feelings or intentions to run rampant.
Couple things: 1) For the past three generations, societal changes have been driven from the teenagers up, not the other way 'round. Tony Judt makes a pretty compelling argument in Postwar that children with no adult responsibilities and a disposable income (however modest) were a new thing in the world, and that the Baby Boomers were really the first generation of "teenagers" the world had ever seen. The social movements of the 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s and 00s were all driven by teenagers. I don't think you can say social changes "hit teenagers the hardest" when they're the ones with the baseball bats. 2) Cars are a big part of it. In an environment where an entry-level Honda is $20k and a BAC of .01 means losing your license for the foreseeable future, there's a powerful disincentive to get around by car. Unfortunately, it's the only way to get around for much of the country. Personally, I owned over a dozen cars between the ages of 15 and 20, at one point having five to my name. That was deviant back then but it's extraordinary these days. At the same time, it was a fuckin' hour drive (at 80mph) to a goddamn Taco Bell so it's not like we were gonna ride bikes. 3) I'm not sure "winning" has much to do with it. Consider - it isn't just American teens that are finding themselves isolated. I'd also point out that the culture of "everyone's a winner" has been thriving for the past 20 years. This is also the first time in my long memory that the necessity of college is being questioned. And it's being questioned mercilessly. There sure wasn't no Khan Academy back in my day. 4) Parents are easy to sneak stuff by. In part, it's because lots of parents would "rather not know" - plausible deniability is a powerful thing. You don't need ICQ to pull a fast one on the 'rents, it's just another way of doing stuff. On the contrary, if I wanna throw a keylogger on your laptop you have no secrets from me. There is, therefore, a tacit approval of all the sneaking. I sure as fuck didn't walk around with an Apple LoJack 4S in my pocket when I was a teen.
What I meant by "societal changes" was more along the lines of what you mention here: That paranoia isn't being propagated by the kids themselves, is it? To me it seems like this culture of paranoia very harmful to everyone and as it has increased from one generation to the next, it does seem like it will influence a generation's ideas on how things should be. I haven't really read anything on that topic, so this is really just my perception, but I think there's something to it. Well, I'd like to point out that the "everyone's a winner" culture is something that very much seems to clash with American professional and university culture. For a while, my father was an associate dean and would have to deal with kids raised thinking that they were capable and deserving of top marks every time. The rude awakening they received in university to a reality they weren't used to, wasn't their fault, but they were the ones that had to deal with it. For a person who is already trying to formulate an identity, that could be a pretty big monkey wrench. One day they're sure that they're #1, the next they realize that they're just another 1 out of 7,000,000,000,000. Or to put it another way, one day they're a winner, the next they're quite possibly a loser. I'm aware that it's not just American kids who are feeling isolated, but it does seem that at the very least, more attention is paid to the American teenagers who do feel isolated. Also, I don't have much experience with non-American teenagers, except for Vietnamese teenagers, who very much seem to subscribe to the winner/loser mentality. Maybe the attitude of "winning" and "losing" doesn't have much to do with it, but I have certainly met people who have felt alienated by it and from what I've seen, it seems like it might well be a factor in how people feel about how they're doing. I'll admit that there is necessarily an element of "don't ask, don't tell" in the parent/child relationship, but with the advent of IMing, there was suddenly a lesser need to use the phone. Sure, a parent could look over my shoulder to try to see what I was typing, but there was much less of that dreaded exchange of calling a girl's house, having her mother answer the phone, asking who is calling and all that. Though my father is probably more tech savvy on some fronts than I am, I don't think that he would have known how to set up a keylogger in the '90's or early '00's. Anyway, my point was, kids have fewer of those "phone type" experiences now and I'm not entirely sure that's a good thing. Learning to express interest in things or other people while not defaulting to embarrassment is something that is beneficial, in my mind. Edited for stuff and stuff.1) For the past three generations, societal changes have been driven from the teenagers up, not the other way 'round. Tony Judt makes a pretty compelling argument in Postwar that children with no adult responsibilities and a disposable income (however modest) were a new thing in the world, and that the Baby Boomers were really the first generation of "teenagers" the world had ever seen. The social movements of the 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s and 00s were all driven by teenagers. I don't think you can say social changes "hit teenagers the hardest" when they're the ones with the baseball bats.
Parents follow societal cues - as they say, kids don't come with an instruction manual, so most parenting is guided by peer pressure. And peer pressure has, increasingly, been about paranoia.
3) I'm not sure "winning" has much to do with it. Consider - it isn't just American teens that are finding themselves isolated. I'd also point out that the culture of "everyone's a winner" has been thriving for the past 20 years. This is also the first time in my long memory that the necessity of college is being questioned. And it's being questioned mercilessly. There sure wasn't no Khan Academy back in my day.
4) Parents are easy to sneak stuff by. In part, it's because lots of parents would "rather not know" - plausible deniability is a powerful thing. You don't need ICQ to pull a fast one on the 'rents, it's just another way of doing stuff. On the contrary, if I wanna throw a keylogger on your laptop you have no secrets from me. There is, therefore, a tacit approval of all the sneaking. I sure as fuck didn't walk around with an Apple LoJack 4S in my pocket when I was a teen.
We're talking about two things here - parents' unwillingness to let children roam, and childrens' willingness to roam the internet. The paranoia is definitely being driven by media through parents - "white virgin in peril" as trope translates to neighborhood watches and 8pm curfews. The abandonment of socialization in favor of online is more of a mixed bag - if the kids weren't satisfied with the outcome, they wouldn't push so hard into it. CB radio was big back in the late '70s, but not with teenagers. That's an alternate form of communication, too. So there's something about the Internet that works for kids well enough that they're willing to forego the social stuff. Totally agree. Basic problem is most people aren't very thoughtful. Statistics that point out that we're living in ever-safer times are really easy to come by. I'ma let my kid wander free and wild but I know that's gonna make me a total weirdo. For sure. But pragmatically speaking, by the time you hit college you're at the cusp of adulthood. The damage has been done. The experiences of college do not shape the behaviors of teen years. Media remains an overwhelmingly American phenomenon. Despite that, Hikikomori sure have been in the news a lot. That's a good point. The fact that the default modes of communication are so poor is definitely a contributing factor.That paranoia isn't being propagated by the kids themselves, is it? To me it seems like this culture of paranoia very harmful to everyone and as it has increased from one generation to the next, it does seem like it will influence a generation's ideas on how things should be.
t does seem like it will influence a generation's ideas on how things should be.
Well, I'd like to point out that the "everyone's a winner" culture is something that very much seems to clash with American professional and university culture.
but it does seem that at the very least, more attention is paid to the American teenagers who do feel isolated.
Anyway, my point was, kids have fewer of those "phone type" experiences now and I'm not entirely sure that's a good thing.
That's a point I hadn't thought of and that certainly seems true. You know, my dad was very much a "let the boy make his mistakes" kind of dad and I thank him for it. Someday, if kids are in the cards, I plan on being the same kind of dad. I hope that more people will see the wisdom in letting their kids get scrapes and get into things. The best lessons come from making mistakes. Human beings are not nearly as delicate as our current society would have us believe. To curb a kid's curiosity is to remove their claws and I really think that kids need those claws. Yes, that's true. What do you think though, about this "prolonged adolescence" that some are worried about? In some ways, I think that if people are living longer and expected to stay in school longer, that the desire for a prolonged adolescence makes sense from the point of view of a college kid who is experiencing freedom for the first time in their lives.The abandonment of socialization in favor of online is more of a mixed bag - if the kids weren't satisfied with the outcome, they wouldn't push so hard into it. CB radio was big back in the late '70s, but not with teenagers. That's an alternate form of communication, too. So there's something about the Internet that works for kids well enough that they're willing to forego the social stuff.
Totally agree. Basic problem is most people aren't very thoughtful. Statistics that point out that we're living in ever-safer times are really easy to come by. I'ma let my kid wander free and wild but I know that's gonna make me a total weirdo.
For sure. But pragmatically speaking, by the time you hit college you're at the cusp of adulthood. The damage has been done. The experiences of college do not shape the behaviors of teen years.
This is an interesting point and one that has sort of "clicked into place" for me recently. I built a car from scratch, as I've mentioned. I built it at my granparents' house. They were old school - Okies blown out of their cattle ranches by the Dust Bowl who moved to Los Alamos after the war, neither of them having finished 8th grade. But that's the thing - most people didn't finish 8th grade back then. My grandmother castigated me once for showing up after 10am on a Friday, starting in with "when I was your age…" (picture it in the deepest okie drawl you can imagine, from a short woman in her 80s). My grandfather said (same basic drawl) "leave him alone! When you were his age you had two kids!" I'm reading this book at the moment. He spends a lot of time talking about the rise of education and prosperity in the 50s and 60s of Europe. One point he makes is that up until education reforms of the 60s, nobody went to college. Compulsory schooling in Italy went from age 12 to age 14; in Germany it went from 12 to 16. That's a bunch of kids that normally would be working in shops and starting up families who were in school all of a sudden. Combine that with a rise in incomes and suddenly you have teenagers, which Mr. Judt emphasizes were something new under the sun. So really - when we talk about "the prolonged adolescence of teenagers" we need to understand that we only really have three generations of teenagers to compare with: Boomers, Boomers' kids, Boomers grandkids. Here, check this out: - If you were 15 in 1930, you were working and done with school forever, unless you were a total egghead (Ph.D class these days). - If you were 15 in 1940, you weren't looking at college, you were looking at military service. - If you were 15 in 1950, you were going to finish high school for damn sure and maybe go on to college. - If you were 15 in 1960, your choices were about to be college or Vietnam. - If you were 15 in 1970, it was college and maybe grad school. - If you were 15 in 1980, not going to college was a let down and grad school was normal. - If you were 15 in 1990, not going to college was officially deviant and chances were good you'd need a grad degree to accomplish anything. - If you were 15 in 2000, you knew your employment prospects were shit unless you had an advanced degree. - If you were 15 in 2010, you know that not only are you going to need an advanced degree, you're going to have to put in a couple years of unpaid internship in order to even make your money back. "Prolonged adolescence?" More like "prolonged dependence." A middle-class kid in 1930 could start a life as soon as he was done with school - was expected to, in fact. A middle-class kid in 2014 is looking at real unemployment for his age group of pushing 27%, exorbitant prices for a degree that guarantees him nothing, a high school diploma that barely counts for anything, a military engaged in endless war for as long as he can remember, and a peerage system that basically requires him to apprentice to his trade after blowing five or six figures spending five years learning nothing even vaguely applicable to his future life. Much like the retreat to the internet, I think a "prolonged adolescence" is a wholly rational response to a wholly irrational situation. I've said before - for the cost of what a 4-year private degree for my daughter is projected to cost, I'll buy her a couple Starbuck's franchises and call it a day. Friend of mine has a girlfriend. She's a dermatologist. One of her colleagues did a breakdown of the cost of a medical degree and the salary of a specialist after completing residency… vs. the cost of buying a Fedex Home Delivery truck. Fedex has the edge for over 20 years. There you go. Prolonged adolescence. Maybe the plumbers have the right idea...What do you think though, about this "prolonged adolescence" that some are worried about? In some ways, I think that if people are living longer and expected to stay in school longer, that the desire for a prolonged adolescence makes sense from the point of view of a college kid who is experiencing freedom for the first time in their lives.
God, this is too true. I was quite unmotivated in highschool. Here in the Netherlands we have a different (imho better but I'm probably biased) education system where you take a standardized test at the end of elementary school. The teacher's advice combined with the test score decides what level of highschool you go to. The highest level (VWO) gets you into universities. I aced the standardized test with 86/88 points. What this system meant for me that all I had to do was ride it all out. I knew that my high school diploma is basically worthless, only getting it meant I could go to universities. On top of that, I had high school one or two years longer than most of my peers from elementary school. So now that I'm a university student I finally get to learn what I love, and if all goes well without any debt. I think I'm one of the lucky. It's even one of the more practical studies, giving me software skills (GIS) besides a better world perspective, which is not that applicable to life yet. I see the dooming unemployment rates appearing on the horizon, but I'll fight it with a killer CV that I'm building now. There is no guarantee, unless you're into engineering or IT. At the same time I see multiple of my friends with the future you described. People who are racking up massive debts, not really interested in the subject, not going out of their way to learn something practical. Riding it out like I rode out highschool. They haven't realized that the freedom of the 'real world' is already upon them; that they can shape their lives right now. Instead, they patiently wait orders and make finals. I wonder how they'll feel when they're let into the 'real world', where you're not dragged along to the next hoop to jump through.A middle-class kid in 2014 is looking at real unemployment for his age group of pushing 27%, exorbitant prices for a degree that guarantees him nothing, a high school diploma that barely counts for anything, a military engaged in endless war for as long as he can remember, and a peerage system that basically requires him to apprentice to his trade after blowing five or six figures spending five years learning nothing even vaguely applicable to his future life.
Yeah, this part is pretty terrifying. I'm fortunate to be in a program that requires a full year of paid, 40 hour work week internships in order to graduate (making it a 5-year undergrad program), and the level of debt is well into the 5 figures, but won't hit 6 figures (yay?). The great part about this is that I'll have work experience with 3 different STEM companies prior to graduating college, which should work out well for a full-time position. Case in point: Prior to this year getting an internship was awfully difficult, even with some work experience. But with two STEM jobs, managerial positions in College organizations and some other factors, I had a 50% interview/application ratio going on this year which was an absurd change. Hopefully that will continue and I'll be able to get a job that will allow me to pay off this debt as fast as possible. As for 4 year programs that don't have the luxury of the paid internship, or don't require as much of it, that's where the scariest part is. It seems as though you pretty much have to have the work experience prior to leaving college in order to get a decent job after college. A friend of mine studied New Media Design and was damn good at it, but is still unemployed almost 8 months later, and is now moving to Brooklyn. Another friend of mine who is a great photographer has been doing apprenticeships since graduating, and has only recently found a steady job. Despite the level of debt that I'm at, I feel lucky to have the work and managerial experience heading into post-undergraduate full-time employment. Hopefully I'm right about that.- If you were 15 in 2010, you know that not only are you going to need an advanced degree, you're going to have to put in a couple years of unpaid internship in order to even make your money back.
- If you were 15 in 2010, you know that not only are you going to need an advanced degree, you're going to have to put in a couple years of unpaid internship in order to even make your money back.
Good for you. This has been an interesting discussion to follow (still reading it) because, you know, my mom's kind of psycho. One of the ways in which she is irrational is how she is, I guess, overprotective. I'm a full-grown adult and if I'm at my parents' (in very white, safe, upper-middle-class suburbia) and want to go for a walk around dusk or after, my mother is all about "Oh but it's not safe." It's all paranoia and "white virgin [although a laughable claim] in distress" and, yes, craziness and maybe control on her part. Never mind the things she chooses not to realize: I have spent lots of very wee hours wandering streets in areas with higher crime rates. I started sneaking out and wandering our neighborhood at night when I was 15. (Eventually caught.) An anecdote: all three of us kids were going out for a walk at night, and she protested "But it's not safe to go out alone!" Alone? Three is a pack. I feel she exemplifies irrationality at these times. It is funny because my younger, prettier sister does not experience this treatment. Apparently if I go out alone at night I'm a walking target. Sure. Her intentions may be good. But they're also based out of irrational fear. It is exactly the parental paranoia this thread addresses. (Except I'm an adult, not 10.) I am impressed by all the reading you've done about kids that's coming through in this thread. If I were to become a parent I'd research the fuck out of it too. I am of the "kids should be allowed to get hurt" mentality. Let her burn her hand on the stove, that's the only way she's going to really know why she shouldn't touch it. Of course, no one would wish harm on their own kids and such - but small pains? They're part of life. Plus, you shouldn't really be afraid of small pains, and you get rid of that fear by experiencing them and realizing they're not so bad. Plus, no matter how you control your kid, they are going to find other ways to get into trouble that you don't want them to find. Can't go out at night? Cool, talking to (cybering with) strangers on internet forums. Or cool, sneaking out while you're asleep. Or playing with matches in the basement or huffing glue because they're curious or I don't know. Kids will find a way. Let your kid wander and walk all over. Let your kid take risks. I don't know about buying her an iPhone ;) but certainly, giving her enough personal freedom so that she can make mistakes and learn from them.I'ma let my kid wander free and wild but I know that's gonna make me a total weirdo.
By way of comparison, my mother didn't give the first fuck so long as I hadn't committed suicide, wasn't doing something she could confuse for suicidal ideation, or doing something that she could twist around inside her head into suicidal behavior. Her brother sucked a tailpipe his Freshman year at Harvard, making her the oldest at 14. Her parents, who hated each other a lot, began a 40-year run of blaming each other for his death. His suicide, combined with her parents' ejection from Harvard and Radcliffe for "sexual indiscretion", required her to go to Swarthmore instead of Harvard. And thus, "suicide" became "the root of the world falling apart." Oddly enough, my sister didn't have to deal with any of it - she could pretend to overdose on Tylenol and it was big laughs. Me? Fall asleep in my locked room and not hear a gentle knock? time to break the door down. Balance that out with the fact that I could make Friday night calls that went like "Hi, I'm in Dallas, back by Sunday night" and that my sister was released into my custody three times during High School. Here's the point - there's "normal crazy" and there's "crazy crazy." I think when one kid gets it vastly more than another, it's "crazy crazy." It's empowering, if I may be so bold, to wrap your head around someone else's crazy and recognize that irrationality is not something that needs to be explained or understood - it just is.This has been an interesting discussion to follow (still reading it) because, you know, my mom's kind of psycho. One of the ways in which she is irrational is how she is, I guess, overprotective.