Survey: Teens prefer instant messages to phone

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Survey: Teens prefer instant messages to phone
jannah
07/24/01 at 14:02:20
Survey: Teens prefer instant messages to
                phone

                June 21, 2001 Posted: 2:24 p.m. EDT (1824 GMT)

                                            By Jeff Palfini

                                            (IDG) -- Their
                                            parents' generation fought to use the
                                            family phone. Today's teens fight
                                            over the keyboard.

                                            A new study by the Pew Internet &
                                            American Life Project says teenagers
                                            have adopted the Internet -- and instant
                                            messaging -- so completely that it has
                                            even replaced face-to-face
                                            communication as the primary mode of
                                            interacting for some teens.

                                            The study concluded that of the
                                            approximately 13 million American
                                            teenagers who use the Net, 74 percent
                use instant messaging. Surprisingly, one-fifth of the teens using IM say it is
                their primary means of communicating with friends. The study extrapolated the
                results from a survey of 754 youngsters between the ages of 12 and 17 and
                their parents.

                "Our sense from talking with these teens is that the Internet expa nds their
                network of friends," says Amanda Lenhart, principal author of the Pew report.
                "They keep in touch with people they normally would not because instant
                messaging can be a more casual way of talking with someone you met at
                summer camp or someone you have not seen in awhile."

                Teens say the Internet also helps them to
                build and maintain friendships. Forty-eight
                percent say the Net improves their current
                friendships, while 32 percent say the Internet
                and instant messaging have helped them
                make new friends.

                Feeling Awkward

                One reason online communication is so
                popular is that it allows teens to avoid some
                of the awkward elements of social
                interaction, like blushing and stammering,
                that can prevent shy teenagers from engaging
                in conversations.

                The study found that 37 percent of teens use
                instant messaging to say something they
                could not have said in person or over the
                phone. For instance, 17 percent of IM users
                have used the medium to ask someone out on
                a date. Thirteen percent have announced over
                IM that they were breaking off a relationship,
                no doubt ending the message with sad-face
                emoticons, the punctuation-mark icons that
                flourish in cyberspace.

                Internet communication is not without its
                detractors. Fifty-seven percent of parents
                surveyed say they are worried that their teen
                might be contacted by a stranger online. The
                concern is not without merit: Almost 60
                percent of the teens reported such a
                situation.

                Perhaps more alarming is that a full 50
                percent of teens have sent a message to a
                stranger. The media is peppered with
                instances of sexual predators meeting their
                prey in online chat rooms. And a study
                released this week from the University of
                New Hampshire at Durham's Crimes Against
                Children Research Center found that 20
                percent of online teens have received sexual advances from a stranger online.

                Cause for Concern?

                For the most part, the teens are not worried. In the UNH study, only 20 percent
                of teens who were approached online are upset by it. Seventy-five percent say
                they aren't concerned by the unsolicited advances. Pew's Lenhart says this is
                because most teens feel confident online.

                "Teens feel more comfortable online because it is not a physical world to them,"
                Lenhart says. "While they may be exposed to advances or images they don't
                like, they don't feel that they will be physically harmed because they know how
                to block offensive users in chat and they believe it would be hard for predators
                to track them down."

                Parents aren't so comfortable with their teens' Internet savvy. Lenhart says the
                report revealed that parents check on what their kids are doing online to a
                surprising degree. While only 27 percent of teens felt that their parents were
                checking up on them, 61 percent of parents reported examining their teen's
                computer to see what they had been up to.

                However, the study also finds that parents who are more familiar with the
                Internet are more likely to be more comfortable with their children's safety
                online.

                While the pitfalls of the Internet and instant messaging are a source of concern,
                Lenhart says that overall, both parents and teens have positive feelings about
                these growing mediums for teen talk.

                "I would emphasize in the end that parents and kids think the Internet is a good
                thing," says Lenhart. "They realize it has its flaws, but in the final tally they
                believe it is a positive thing in their kids' lives."
Re: Survey: Teens prefer instant messages to phone
BrKhalid
07/26/01 at 04:59:38
Asalaamu Alaikum ;-)


[quote]One reason online communication is so popular is that it allows teens to avoid some of the awkward elements of social interaction, like blushing and stammering, that can prevent shy teenagers from engaging in conversations. [/quote]


Is there such a thing as a shy teenager now?


Its as if modesty and shyness are bad words!!
Re: Survey: Teens prefer instant messages to phone
Haseeba
07/26/01 at 07:59:20
yeah i def use ICQ/Im WAY more than the phone .... its tru many of the people i talk to i would never call to keep in touch
however its not nessaraly a good thing cause it leads to a lot of point less talk  ...
Re: Survey: Teens prefer instant messages to phone
Adi28
07/26/01 at 22:41:16

  salaam

yeah i have to agree with this article too, its so true half of my friends live far away so IM is the only way we stay in touch on a day to day basis..its sad but true hehe ;)

   
Re: Survey: Teens prefer instant messages to phone
se7en
07/26/01 at 23:03:18

salaam,

IM is addictive as heck, and it's really really *really* easy to get caught up in something for the exact reason br khalid quoted.. it's really easy to let your guard down and say a lot more than you should.. chat with people you shouldn't.. discuss things you shouldn't.. etc


Re: Survey: Teens prefer instant messages to phone
kiwi25
07/27/01 at 12:01:01
salaam,

hmmm i seem to be the only loner, im a phone addict, i hardly go online but when i do, im always caught up on im, but not asmuch as the phone.

wasalam, nouha:)


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