What Teens Are Doing Online

What Teens Are Doing Online

(reposted from the Free Spirit Publishing blog)

Some adults are under the assumption that just about everything that teens do online is either hurtful to themselves or others or a complete waste of time. To be fair, there’s no shortage of daily headlines that seem to point to the conclusion that many teens are using technology irresponsibly. But the reality is that those stories represent a small part of what most teens are doing in cyberspace. For example, very few young people are trolling chat rooms looking to meet new friends. Most teens use computers, and more often mobile phones, to interact with others whom they know in real life. Sometimes they are communicating with friends of friends or “strangers” while playing online games, but generally they are connected to those they know. According to recent data released by the Pew Internet & American Life project, 60 percent of teen Facebookers have their profiles restricted to friends only and nearly three-quarters have deleted people from their friends list. So in short, most teens are using social media conscientiously.

Moreover, many teens are using technology for educational purposes. In every survey of students that we have done over the last decade, “using the Internet for schoolwork” has always been among the top five weekly activities reported—ahead of Facebook, online games, and YouTube. In our most recent survey of about 1,500 randomly selected middle and high school students in one large district, almost 94 percent of respondents said that they used the Internet for schoolwork at least every week (by comparison, about 19 percent said they used Twitter as often). We regularly hear stories of students using Skype or FaceTime to collaborate in real time with classmates, and the World Wide Web allows curious learners to dig even deeper into a topic.

We also know from our work that the vast majority of teens are not behaving recklessly, carelessly, or maliciously. On average, about 17 percent of the thousands of students we have surveyed over the last five years have admitted to us that they have cyberbullied others at some point in their lifetime (less than 10 percent say they did it in the previous 30 days). So this means that between 80 and 90 percent of teens are not cyberbullying others! These data belie the conventional wisdom held by many (adults and teens alike) that a significant majority of teens are using technology to torment.

Furthermore, a significant number of students are now taking the power of technology and using it to do good. We’ve written about the Nice it Forward movement on our blog before, and it appears to be growing with students at schools from all around the United States setting up social media pages for the purpose of encouraging and recognizing their classmates and others. Kevin Curwick, the 18-year-old founder of the @OsseoNiceThings feed that really got the movement going, recently told us that he started the Twitter account to “bring back a sense of school unity, and to show support for students of all interests.”

Jeremiah Anthony and his friends at West High School have been complimenting classmates for nearly 2 years on Twitter and Facebook at @westhighbros. Like Kevin, Jeremiah sought to exploit the power of technology to spread a positive message. “Our Twitter account is here to prove to every single doubter of the goodness of people, that people my age really do great things with technology.” Similarly, there has been increased interest in adolescents to artfully weave words into a message of hope, compassion, and respectfulness when using technology as illustrated in a number of poetry slams recorded and posted online. (Here is just one recent example.)

In short, it is clear that the vast majority of teens are using technology safely, responsibly, and appropriately. And it is also likely that many more are proactively using it to spread positive messages rather than negative ones. Our mandate as caring adults is to encourage the teens in our lives to choose positivity over negativity and to acknowledge the efforts of those who do the right thing, instead of drawing unnecessary attention toward those who do not.

2 Comments

  1. It is true that parents’ perception of what their kids do online is a little skewed. Sure, they use social media, but they use it- and the internet- for better learning too. There are have been so many instances where the students are interacting with the natives of the country whose language they are learning in school. It is time for parents to learn that the internet is not just a murky thing that is used to stalk others via social networks.

  2. Thank you for this post Justin! This sums up one of the points I try to address with parent, teachers and therapists. There is much media misreporting related to cyberbullying=suicide. So of course the thoughts are that youth are all involved in some sort of horrific behaviors online. We have to continue to dispell such simplistic ideology with factual data. Keep it up!

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