One
day last summer, around noon, I called
Athena, a 13-year-old who lives in Houston, Texas. She answered her phone—she’s
had an iPhone since she was 11—sounding as if she’d just woken up. We chatted
about her favorite songs and TV shows, and I asked her what she likes to do
with her friends. “We go to the mall,” she said. “Do your parents drop you
off?,” I asked, recalling my own middle-school days, in the 1980s, when I’d
enjoy a few parent-free hours shopping with my friends. “No—I go with my
family,” she replied. “We’ll go with my mom and brothers and walk a little
behind them. I just have to tell my mom where we’re going. I have to check in
every hour or every 30 minutes.”
Those mall trips are
infrequent—about once a month. More often, Athena and her friends spend time
together on their phones, unchaperoned. Unlike the teens of my generation, who
might have spent an evening tying up the family landline with gossip, they talk
on Snapchat, the smartphone app that allows users to send pictures and videos
that quickly disappear. They make sure to keep up their Snapstreaks, which show
how many days in a row they have Snapchatted with each other. Sometimes they
save screenshots of particularly ridiculous pictures of friends. “It’s good
blackmail,” Athena said. (Because she’s a minor, I’m not using her real name.)
She told me she’d spent most of the summer hanging out alone in her room with
her phone. That’s just the way her generation is, she said. “We didn’t have a
choice to know any life without iPads or iPhones. I think we like our phones
more than we like actual people.”
I’ve been researching generational
differences for 25 years, starting when I was a 22-year-old doctoral student in
psychology. Typically, the characteristics that come to define a generation
appear gradually, and along a continuum. Beliefs and behaviors that were
already rising simply continue to do so. Millennials, for instance, are a
highly individualistic generation, but individualism had been increasing since
the Baby Boomers turned on, tuned in, and dropped out. I had grown accustomed
to line graphs of trends that looked like modest hills and valleys. Then I
began studying Athena’s generation.
Around 2012, I noticed abrupt shifts
in teen behaviors and emotional states. The gentle slopes of the line graphs
became steep mountains and sheer cliffs, and many of the distinctive
characteristics of the Millennial generation began to disappear. In all my
analyses of generational data—some reaching back to the 1930s—I had never seen
anything like it.
The allure of independence, so
powerful to previous generations, holds less sway over today’s teens.
At first I presumed these might be blips, but the trends persisted, across several years and a series of national surveys. The changes weren’t just in degree, but in kind. The biggest difference between the Millennials and their predecessors was in how they viewed the world; teens today differ from the Millennials not just in their views but in how they spend their time. The experiences they have every day are radically different from those of the generation that came of age just a few years before them.
What happened in 2012 to cause such dramatic shifts in behavior? It was after the Great Recession, which officially lasted from 2007 to 2009 and had a starker effect on Millennials trying to find a place in a sputtering economy. But it was exactly the moment when the proportion of Americans who owned a smartphone surpassed 50 percent.
The
more I pored over yearly surveys of teen attitudes and behaviors,
and the more I talked with young people like Athena, the clearer it became that
theirs is a generation shaped by the smartphone and by the concomitant rise of
social media. I call them iGen. Born between 1995 and 2012, members of this
generation are growing up with smartphones, have an Instagram account before
they start high school, and do not remember a time before the internet. The
Millennials grew up with the web as well, but it wasn’t ever-present in their
lives, at hand at all times, day and night. iGen’s oldest members were early
adolescents when the iPhone was introduced, in 2007, and high-school students
when the iPad entered the scene, in 2010. A 2017 survey of more than 5,000
American teens found that three out of four owned an iPhone.
The advent of the smartphone and its
cousin the tablet was followed quickly by hand-wringing about the deleterious
effects of “screen time.” But the impact of these devices has not been fully
appreciated, and goes far beyond the usual concerns about curtailed attention
spans. The arrival of the smartphone has radically changed every aspect of
teenagers’ lives, from the nature of their social interactions to their mental
health. These changes have affected young people in every corner of the nation
and in every type of household. The trends appear among teens poor and rich; of
every ethnic background; in cities, suburbs, and small towns. Where there are
cell towers, there are teens living their lives on their smartphone.
To those of us who fondly recall a
more analog adolescence, this may seem foreign and troubling. The aim of generational
study, however, is not to succumb to nostalgia for the way things used to be;
it’s to understand how they are now. Some generational changes are positive,
some are negative, and many are both. More comfortable in their bedrooms than
in a car or at a party, today’s teens are physically safer than teens have ever
been. They’re markedly less likely to get into a car accident and, having less
of a taste for alcohol than their predecessors, are less susceptible to
drinking’s attendant ills.
Psychologically, however, they are
more vulnerable than Millennials were: Rates of teen depression and suicide
have skyrocketed since 2011. It’s not an exaggeration to describe iGen as being
on the brink of the worst mental-health crisis in decades. Much of this deterioration
can be traced to their phones.
Even when a seismic event—a war, a
technological leap, a free concert in the mud—plays an outsize role in shaping
a group of young people, no single factor ever defines a generation. Parenting
styles continue to change, as do school curricula and culture, and these things
matter. But the twin rise of the smartphone and social media has caused an
earthquake of a magnitude we’ve not seen in a very long time, if ever. There is
compelling evidence that the devices we’ve placed in young people’s hands are
having profound effects on their lives—and making them seriously unhappy.
In
the early 1970s, the photographer Bill Yates shot a series of
portraits at the Sweetheart Roller Skating Rink in Tampa, Florida. In one, a
shirtless teen stands with a large bottle of peppermint schnapps stuck in the
waistband of his jeans. In another, a boy who looks no older than 12 poses with
a cigarette in his mouth. The rink was a place where kids could get away from
their parents and inhabit a world of their own, a world where they could drink,
smoke, and make out in the backs of their cars. In stark black-and-white, the
adolescent Boomers gaze at Yates’s camera with the self-confidence born of
making your own choices—even if, perhaps especially if, your parents wouldn’t
think they were the right ones.
Fifteen years later, during my own
teenage years as a member of Generation X, smoking had lost some of its
romance, but independence was definitely still in. My friends and I plotted to
get our driver’s license as soon as we could, making DMV appointments for the
day we turned 16 and using our newfound freedom to escape the confines of our
suburban neighborhood. Asked by our parents, “When will you be home?,” we
replied, “When do I have to be?”
But the allure of independence, so
powerful to previous generations, holds less sway over today’s teens, who are
less likely to leave the house without their parents. The shift is stunning:
12th-graders in 2015 were going out less often than eighth-graders did
as recently as 2009.
Today’s teens are also less likely
to date. The initial stage of courtship, which Gen Xers called “liking” (as in
“Ooh, he likes you!”), kids now call “talking”—an ironic choice for a
generation that prefers texting to actual conversation. After two teens have
“talked” for a while, they might start dating. But only about 56 percent of
high-school seniors in 2015 went out on dates; for Boomers and Gen Xers, the
number was about 85 percent.
The decline in dating tracks with a
decline in sexual activity. The drop is the sharpest for ninth-graders, among
whom the number of sexually active teens has been cut by almost 40 percent
since 1991. The average teen now has had sex for the first time by the spring
of 11th grade, a full year later than the average Gen Xer. Fewer teens having
sex has contributed to what many see as one of the most positive youth trends
in recent years: The teen birth rate hit an all-time low in 2016, down 67
percent since its modern peak, in 1991.
Even driving, a symbol of adolescent
freedom inscribed in American popular culture, from Rebel Without a
Cause to Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, has lost its appeal for
today’s teens. Nearly all Boomer high-school students had their driver’s
license by the spring of their senior year; more than one in four teens today
still lack one at the end of high school. For some, Mom and Dad are such good chauffeurs
that there’s no urgent need to drive. “My parents drove me everywhere and never
complained, so I always had rides,” a 21-year-old student in San Diego told me.
“I didn’t get my license until my mom told me I had to because she could not
keep driving me to school.” She finally got her license six months after her
18th birthday. In conversation after conversation, teens described getting
their license as something to be nagged into by their parents—a notion that
would have been unthinkable to previous generations.
Independence isn’t free—you need
some money in your pocket to pay for gas, or for that bottle of schnapps. In
earlier eras, kids worked in great numbers, eager to finance their freedom or
prodded by their parents to learn the value of a dollar. But iGen teens aren’t
working (or managing their own money) as much. In the late 1970s, 77 percent of
high-school seniors worked for pay during the school year; by the mid-2010s,
only 55 percent did. The number of eighth-graders who work for pay has been cut
in half. These declines accelerated during the Great Recession, but teen
employment has not bounced back, even though job availability has.
Of course, putting off the
responsibilities of adulthood is not an iGen innovation. Gen Xers, in the
1990s, were the first to postpone the traditional markers of adulthood. Young
Gen Xers were just about as likely to drive, drink alcohol, and date as young
Boomers had been, and more likely to have sex and get pregnant as teens. But as
they left their teenage years behind, Gen Xers married and started careers
later than their Boomer predecessors had.
Gen X managed to stretch adolescence
beyond all previous limits: Its members started becoming adults earlier and
finished becoming adults later. Beginning with Millennials and continuing with
iGen, adolescence is contracting again—but only because its onset is being
delayed. Across a range of behaviors—drinking, dating, spending time
unsupervised— 18-year-olds now act more like 15-year-olds used to, and
15-year-olds more like 13-year-olds. Childhood now stretches well into high
school.
Why are today’s teens waiting longer
to take on both the responsibilities and the pleasures of adulthood? Shifts in
the economy, and parenting, certainly play a role. In an information economy
that rewards higher education more than early work history, parents may be
inclined to encourage their kids to stay home and study rather than to get a
part-time job. Teens, in turn, seem to be content with this homebody
arrangement—not because they’re so studious, but because their social life is
lived on their phone. They don’t need to leave home to spend time with their
friends.
If today’s teens were a generation
of grinds, we’d see that in the data. But eighth-, 10th-, and 12th-graders in
the 2010s actually spend less time on homework than Gen X teens did in the
early 1990s. (High-school seniors headed for four-year colleges spend about the
same amount of time on homework as their predecessors did.) The time that
seniors spend on activities such as student clubs and sports and exercise has
changed little in recent years. Combined with the decline in working for pay,
this means iGen teens have more leisure time than Gen X teens did, not less.
So what are they doing with all that
time? They are on their phone, in their room, alone and often distressed.
One
of the ironies of iGen life is that despite spending far more time
under the same roof as their parents, today’s teens can hardly be said to be
closer to their mothers and fathers than their predecessors were. “I’ve seen my
friends with their families—they don’t talk to them,” Athena told me. “They
just say ‘Okay, okay, whatever’ while they’re on their phones. They don’t pay
attention to their family.” Like her peers, Athena is an expert at tuning out
her parents so she can focus on her phone. She spent much of her summer keeping
up with friends, but nearly all of it was over text or Snapchat. “I’ve been on
my phone more than I’ve been with actual people,” she said. “My bed has, like,
an imprint of my body.”
In this, too, she is typical. The
number of teens who get together with their friends nearly every day dropped by
more than 40 percent from 2000 to 2015; the decline has been especially steep
recently. It’s not only a matter of fewer kids partying; fewer kids are
spending time simply hanging out. That’s something most teens used to do: nerds
and jocks, poor kids and rich kids, C students and A students. The roller rink,
the basketball court, the town pool, the local necking spot—they’ve all been replaced
by virtual spaces accessed through apps and the web.
You might expect that teens spend so
much time in these new spaces because it makes them happy, but most data
suggest that it does not. The Monitoring the Future survey, funded by the
National Institute on Drug Abuse and designed to be nationally representative,
has asked 12th-graders more than 1,000 questions every year since 1975 and
queried eighth- and 10th-graders since 1991. The survey asks teens how happy
they are and also how much of their leisure time they spend on various
activities, including nonscreen activities such as in-person social interaction
and exercise, and, in recent years, screen activities such as using social
media, texting, and browsing the web. The results could not be clearer: Teens
who spend more time than average on screen activities are more likely to be
unhappy, and those who spend more time than average on nonscreen activities are
more likely to be happy.
There’s not a single exception. All
screen activities are linked to less happiness, and all nonscreen activities
are linked to more happiness. Eighth-graders who spend 10 or more hours a week
on social media are 56 percent more likely to say they’re unhappy than those
who devote less time to social media. Admittedly, 10 hours a week is a lot. But
those who spend six to nine hours a week on social media are still 47 percent
more likely to say they are unhappy than those who use social media even less.
The opposite is true of in-person interactions. Those who spend an above-average
amount of time with their friends in person are 20 percent less likely to say
they’re unhappy than those who hang out for a below-average amount of time.
The more time teens spend looking at
screens, the more likely they are to report symptoms of depression.
If you were going to give advice for
a happy adolescence based on this survey, it would be straightforward: Put down
the phone, turn off the laptop, and do something—anything—that does not involve
a screen. Of course, these analyses don’t unequivocally prove that screen
time causes unhappiness; it’s possible that unhappy teens
spend more time online. But recent research suggests that screen time, in
particular social-media use, does indeed cause unhappiness. One study asked
college students with a Facebook page to complete short surveys on their phone
over the course of two weeks. They’d get a text message with a link five times
a day, and report on their mood and how much they’d used Facebook. The more
they’d used Facebook, the unhappier they felt, but feeling unhappy did not
subsequently lead to more Facebook use.
Social-networking sites like
Facebook promise to connect us to friends. But the portrait of iGen teens
emerging from the data is one of a lonely, dislocated generation. Teens who visit
social-networking sites every day but see their friends in person less
frequently are the most likely to agree with the statements “A lot of times I
feel lonely,” “I often feel left out of things,” and “I often wish I had more
good friends.” Teens’ feelings of loneliness spiked in 2013 and have remained
high since.
This doesn’t always mean that, on an individual level, kids who spend more time online are lonelier than kids who spend less time online. Teens who spend more time on social media also spend more time with their friends in person, on average—highly social teens are more social in both venues, and less social teens are less so. But at the generational level, when teens spend more time on smartphones and less time on in-person social interactions, loneliness is more common.
So is depression. Once again, the
effect of screen activities is unmistakable: The more time teens spend looking
at screens, the more likely they are to report symptoms of depression.
Eighth-graders who are heavy users of social media increase their risk of
depression by 27 percent, while those who play sports, go to religious
services, or even do homework more than the average teen cut their risk
significantly.
Teens who spend three hours a day or
more on electronic devices are 35 percent more likely to have a risk factor for
suicide, such as making a suicide plan. (That’s much more than the risk related
to, say, watching TV.) One piece of data that indirectly but stunningly
captures kids’ growing isolation, for good and for bad: Since 2007, the
homicide rate among teens has declined, but the suicide rate has increased. As
teens have started spending less time together, they have become less likely to
kill one another, and more likely to kill themselves. In 2011, for the first time
in 24 years, the teen suicide rate was higher than the teen homicide rate.
Depression and suicide have many
causes; too much technology is clearly not the only one. And the teen suicide
rate was even higher in the 1990s, long before smartphones existed. Then again,
about four times as many Americans now take antidepressants, which are often
effective in treating severe depression, the type most strongly linked to
suicide.
What’s
the connection between smartphones and the apparent psychological
distress this generation is experiencing? For all their power to link kids day
and night, social media also exacerbate the age-old teen concern about being
left out. Today’s teens may go to fewer parties and spend less time together in
person, but when they do congregate, they document their hangouts
relentlessly—on Snapchat, Instagram, Facebook. Those not invited to come along
are keenly aware of it. Accordingly, the number of teens who feel left out has
reached all-time highs across age groups. Like the increase in loneliness, the
upswing in feeling left out has been swift and significant.
This trend has been especially steep
among girls. Forty-eight percent more girls said they often felt left out in
2015 than in 2010, compared with 27 percent more boys. Girls use social media
more often, giving them additional opportunities to feel excluded and lonely
when they see their friends or classmates getting together without them. Social
media levy a psychic tax on the teen doing the posting as well, as she
anxiously awaits the affirmation of comments and likes. When Athena posts
pictures to Instagram, she told me, “I’m nervous about what people think and
are going to say. It sometimes bugs me when I don’t get a certain amount of
likes on a picture.”
Girls have also borne the brunt of
the rise in depressive symptoms among today’s teens. Boys’ depressive symptoms
increased by 21 percent from 2012 to 2015, while girls’ increased by 50
percent—more than twice as much. The rise in suicide, too, is more pronounced
among girls. Although the rate increased for both sexes, three times as many
12-to-14-year-old girls killed themselves in 2015 as in 2007, compared with
twice as many boys. The suicide rate is still higher for boys, in part because
they use more-lethal methods, but girls are beginning to close the gap.
These more dire consequences for
teenage girls could also be rooted in the fact that they’re more likely to
experience cyberbullying. Boys tend to bully one another physically, while
girls are more likely to do so by undermining a victim’s social status or
relationships. Social media give middle- and high-school girls a platform on
which to carry out the style of aggression they favor, ostracizing and
excluding other girls around the clock.
Social-media companies are of course
aware of these problems, and to one degree or another have endeavored to
prevent cyberbullying. But their various motivations are, to say the least,
complex. A recently leaked Facebook document indicated that the company had
been touting to advertisers its ability to determine teens’ emotional state
based on their on-site behavior, and even to pinpoint “moments when young
people need a confidence boost.” Facebook acknowledged that the document was
real, but denied that it offers “tools to target people based on their
emotional state.”
In
july 2014, a 13-year-old girl in North Texas woke to the smell of
something burning. Her phone had overheated and melted into the sheets.
National news outlets picked up the story, stoking readers’ fears that their
cellphone might spontaneously combust. To me, however, the flaming cellphone
wasn’t the only surprising aspect of the story. Why, I
wondered, would anyone sleep with her phone beside her in bed? It’s
not as though you can surf the web while you’re sleeping. And who could slumber
deeply inches from a buzzing phone?
Curious, I asked my undergraduate
students at San Diego State University what they do with their phone while they
sleep. Their answers were a profile in obsession. Nearly all slept with their
phone, putting it under their pillow, on the mattress, or at the very least
within arm’s reach of the bed. They checked social media right before they went
to sleep, and reached for their phone as soon as they woke up in the morning
(they had to—all of them used it as their alarm clock). Their phone was the
last thing they saw before they went to sleep and the first thing they saw when
they woke up. If they woke in the middle of the night, they often ended up
looking at their phone. Some used the language of addiction. “I know I
shouldn’t, but I just can’t help it,” one said about looking at her phone while
in bed. Others saw their phone as an extension of their body—or even like a
lover: “Having my phone closer to me while I’m sleeping is a comfort.”
It may be a comfort, but the
smartphone is cutting into teens’ sleep: Many now sleep less than seven hours
most nights. Sleep experts say that teens should get about nine hours of sleep
a night; a teen who is getting less than seven hours a night is significantly
sleep deprived. Fifty-seven percent more teens were sleep deprived in 2015 than
in 1991. In just the four years from 2012 to 2015, 22 percent more teens failed
to get seven hours of sleep.
The increase is suspiciously timed,
once again starting around when most teens got a smartphone. Two national
surveys show that teens who spend three or more hours a day on electronic
devices are 28 percent more likely to get less than seven hours of sleep than
those who spend fewer than three hours, and teens who visit social-media sites
every day are 19 percent more likely to be sleep deprived. A meta-analysis of
studies on electronic-device use among children found similar results: Children
who use a media device right before bed are more likely to sleep less than they
should, more likely to sleep poorly, and more than twice as likely to be sleepy
during the day.
I’ve observed my toddler, barely old
enough to walk, confidently swiping her way through an iPad.
Electronic devices and social media
seem to have an especially strong ability to disrupt sleep. Teens who read
books and magazines more often than the average are actually slightly less
likely to be sleep deprived—either reading lulls them to sleep, or they can put
the book down at bedtime. Watching TV for several hours a day is only weakly
linked to sleeping less. But the allure of the smartphone is often too much to
resist.
Sleep deprivation is linked to
myriad issues, including compromised thinking and reasoning, susceptibility to
illness, weight gain, and high blood pressure. It also affects mood: People who
don’t sleep enough are prone to depression and anxiety. Again, it’s difficult
to trace the precise paths of causation. Smartphones could be causing lack of
sleep, which leads to depression, or the phones could be causing depression,
which leads to lack of sleep. Or some other factor could be causing both
depression and sleep deprivation to rise. But the smartphone, its blue light
glowing in the dark, is likely playing a nefarious role.
The
correlations between depression and smartphone use are strong
enough to suggest that more parents should be telling their kids to put down
their phone. As the technology writer Nick Bilton has reported, it’s a policy
some Silicon Valley executives follow. Even Steve Jobs limited his kids’ use of
the devices he brought into the world.
What’s at stake isn’t just how kids
experience adolescence. The constant presence of smartphones is likely to
affect them well into adulthood. Among people who suffer an episode of
depression, at least half become depressed again later in life. Adolescence is
a key time for developing social skills; as teens spend less time with their
friends face-to-face, they have fewer opportunities to practice them. In the
next decade, we may see more adults who know just the right emoji for a
situation, but not the right facial expression.
I realize that restricting
technology might be an unrealistic demand to impose on a generation of kids so
accustomed to being wired at all times. My three daughters were born in 2006,
2009, and 2012. They’re not yet old enough to display the traits of iGen teens,
but I have already witnessed firsthand just how ingrained new media are in
their young lives. I’ve observed my toddler, barely old enough to walk,
confidently swiping her way through an iPad. I’ve experienced my 6-year-old
asking for her own cellphone. I’ve overheard my 9-year-old discussing the
latest app to sweep the fourth grade. Prying the phone out of our kids’ hands
will be difficult, even more so than the quixotic efforts of my parents’
generation to get their kids to turn off MTV and get some fresh air. But more
seems to be at stake in urging teens to use their phone responsibly, and there
are benefits to be gained even if all we instill in our children is the
importance of moderation. Significant effects on both mental health and sleep
time appear after two or more hours a day on electronic devices. The average
teen spends about two and a half hours a day on electronic devices. Some mild
boundary-setting could keep kids from falling into harmful habits.
In my conversations with teens, I
saw hopeful signs that kids themselves are beginning to link some of their
troubles to their ever-present phone. Athena told me that when she does spend
time with her friends in person, they are often looking at their device instead
of at her. “I’m trying to talk to them about something, and they don’t actually
look at my face,” she said. “They’re looking at their phone, or they’re looking
at their Apple Watch.” “What does that feel like, when you’re trying to talk to
somebody face-to-face and they’re not looking at you?,” I asked. “It kind of
hurts,” she said. “It hurts. I know my parents’ generation didn’t do that. I could
be talking about something super important to me, and they wouldn’t even be
listening.”
Once, she told me, she was hanging
out with a friend who was texting her boyfriend. “I was trying to talk to her
about my family, and what was going on, and she was like, ‘Uh-huh, yeah,
whatever.’ So I took her phone out of her hands and I threw it at my wall.”
I couldn’t help laughing. “You play
volleyball,” I said. “Do you have a pretty good arm?” “Yep,” she replied.
This article has been adapted from
Jean M. Twenge's forthcoming book, iGen: Why Today’s Super-Connected Kids Are Growing Up
Less Rebellious, More Tolerant, Less Happy—and Completely Unprepared for
Adulthood—and What That Means for the Rest of Us.
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