On Fri, Mar 15, 2024 at 7:09 PM Emanuel Berg <in...@dataswamp.org> wrote: > > Jeffrey Walton wrote: > > > Fascinating reading here: > > <https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2024/03/teen-childhood-smartphone-use-mental-health-effects/677722/>. > > It completely explains why GenZ are having so many problems > > with adulthood. Smartphones and Social Media are > > the culprits. > > Society is the problem where you are either an elite prospect > football player, a professional carpenter/construction worker, > _or_ you don't get to do anything, ever.
The article did not discuss employment or socio-economics, other than to say: The most recent Gallup data show that American teens spend about five hours a day just on social-media platforms (including watching videos on TikTok and YouTube). Add in all the other phone- and screen-based activities, and the number rises to somewhere between seven and nine hours a day, on average. The numbers are even higher in single-parent and low-income families, and among Black, Hispanic, and Native American families. These very high numbers do not include time spent in front of screens for school or homework, nor do they include all the time adolescents spend paying only partial attention to events in the real world while thinking about what they’re missing on social media or waiting for their phones to ping. Pew reports that in 2022, one-third of teens said they were on one of the major social-media sites “almost constantly,” and nearly half said the same of the internet in general. For these heavy users, nearly every waking hour is an hour absorbed, in full or in part, by their devices. So the problem with GenZ seems to be how they are growing up and what they are spending their time on; and not their job (they are teens!), and not society around them (which they withdraw from). Jeff