Teens



Teens 2012: Truth, Trends, and Myths About Teen Online Behavior Kristen Purcell, Ph.D. Associate Director, Research Pew Internet ProjectACT Enrollment Planners Annual Conference July 11, 2012

• Part of the Pew Research Center, a nonpartisan “fact tank” based in Washington, DC• PRC’s mission is to provide high quality, objective data to thought leaders and policymakers• Data for this talk is from nationally representative telephone surveys of U.S. adults and teens (on landlines and cell phones)• Presentation slides and all data are available at pewinternet.org
The Internet:Then and Now
Internet Use in the U.S. in 2000 Slow, stationary connections 46% of US adults used the internet built around a desktop computer 5% had home broadband connections 53% owned a cell phone 0% connected to internet wirelessly 0% used social network sites _________________________Information flowed mainly one way Information consumption was a stationary activity
The Internet in 2012 Mobile devices have82% of US adults use the internet fundamentally changed the relationship between 2/3 have broadband at home information, time and space88% have a cell phone; 46% are smartphone users 19% have a tablet computer 19% have an e-reader 2/3 are wireless internet users 65% of online adults use SNS
Gadget ownership snapshot for adults age 18+ % of American adults age 18+ who own each device Subset of cell phones Source: The Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project surveys.
Adult gadget ownership over time (2006-2012) % of American adults age 18+ who own each device Source: Pew Internet surveys, 2006-2012
Apps: From Superhighway to BypassOne in three US adults download apps to a cell phone or tablet computer Apps provide direct connections to information % of app downloaders who have downloaded each type of app… App downloading is highest among young adults age 18-29 Based on August 2011 Pew Internet Tracking Survey
Tablet and E-reader Use is on the Rise • 29% of adults own a specialized device for e-reading (either a tablet or an e-reader) – 19% of adults own an e-book reader – 19% of adults own a tablet computer • E-book reader and tablet ownership are both strongly correlated with income and education, and these devices are most popular with adults under age 50 • Women are more likely than men to own e- readers, and parents are more likely than non-parents to own tablets
65% of online adults use social networking sitesRates of adult SNS use areconsistent across gender, race/ethnicity, and income groups
Information is Woven Into Our LivesMobile is the needle, Social Networks are the thread Mobile… Social Networks… Moves information Surround us with with us information through our many connections Makes informationaccessible ANYTIME Bring us information and ANYWHERE from multiple, varied sources Puts information at our fingertips Provide instant feedback, meaning and contextMagnifies the demandfor timely information Allow us to shape and create information Makes information ourselves and amplify location-sensitive others’ messages
Teens Online:Truths, Trends, and Myths
True or False? • The rate of internet use among teens is higher than it is among any other age group• Since 2004, teens have shown the greatest increase of any age group in their overall rate of internet use
Teens (and 18-29 year-olds) have the highest rates of internet usebut since 2004, there has been more growth in the percent of internet users among 18-29 year-olds and adults age 65 and older Internet adoption over time by teens and adults % within each age group who go online 100% 95% 87% 94% 80% 87% 80% 79% 74% 69% 60% 12-17 18-29 40% 41% 30-49 29% 50-64 20% 65+ 0% Nov 04 Nov 06 Nov 07 Feb 08 Sept 09 July 11 Source: The Pew Research Center Internet & American Life Project Teen & Parent surveys. Methodological information for each survey is available from www.pewinternet.org
True or False?• Teens have the highest rate of cell phone ownership of any age group• In 2012, the majority of 12-17 year-olds have a smartphone
Teens are less likely than adults 18-64 to have a cell phone, and only 23% have a smartphone % in each age group who have a cell phone 46% of US adults now own SMARTPHONES, up from 35% in Spring 2011 Highest rates among: 18-24 year-olds (67%) 25-34 year-olds (71%) 23% of teens age 12-17 have a smartphone 31% of 14-17 year-olds have a smartphone, compared with just 8% of Teen data July 2011 Adult data Feb 2012 12-13 year-olds
87% of OLDER teens have cell phones, and 91% of teens from HIGH INCOME households have cell phonesWho has a cell phone? % of teens within each group who have a cell phoneAll teens (n=799) 77%Gender Boys (n=391) 76 Girls (n=408) 78Age 12-13 (n=225) 57* 14-17 (n=574) 87*Race/Ethnicity White, non-Hispanic (n=442) 81** Black, non-Hispanic (n=123) 72* Hispanic (English- and Spanish-speaking) (n=172) 63Household Income Less than $30,000 (n=192) 62 $30,000-$49,999 (n=111) 75 $50,000-$74,999 (n=119) 72 $75,000+ (n=304) 91**Note: * indicates statistically significant difference between rows. **indicates a data point that is significant ly different than all other rows in the table section.Source: The Pew Research Centers Internet & American Life Project Teen/Parent Survey, April 19 – July 14, 2011. n=799 teens ages 12-17 and a parent orguardian. Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish, on landlines and cell phones.
True or False?Among teens 12-17, the most common device used to access the internet is a cell phone
Teens are still more likely to access the internet on a desktop/laptop computer than on any other device In the last 30 days, have you used the internet on ____? % of teens age 12-17 who used this gadget in past 30 days to access the internet Desktop or laptop 88% computer Cell phone 49 Mp3 player or iPod 34 Game console 30Tablet computer or iPad 16 0 20 40 60 80 100Source: The Pew Research Centers Internet & American Life Project, April 19 – July 14, 2011 Teen Survey. n=799 teens 12-17 and a parent or guardian. Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish, by landline and cell phone, and included an oversample of minority families.
True or False? • Talking on the phone (even a cell phone) with friends is becoming less common among teens• Texting is by far most teens’ preferred method of communication• The number of texts the typical teen sends each day is increasing • Teens do not use email
Fewer teens are talking with their friends on cell phones every dayHow often do you talk to friends on your cell phone? % of all teensJul-11 26 21 18 7 28Sep-09 38 16 12 6 28Feb-08 36 15 10 5 34Nov-07 35 15 10 6 33Nov-06 35 12 8 6 41 0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% Every day Several times a week At least once a week Less than once a week Never/cannot do thisSource: The Pew Research Centers Internet & American Life Project, April 19 – July 14, 2011 Parent/Teen Survey. n=799 teens 12-17 and a parentor guardian. Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish, by landline and cell phone.
Fewer teens are talking with their friends on landline phones at all, and those who do are doing it less frequently How often do you talk to friends on a landline phone? % of all teens Source: The Pew Research Centers Internet & American Life Project, April 19 – July 14, 2011 Parent/Teen Survey. n=799 teens 12-17 and a parent or guardian. Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish, by landline and cell phone.
Texting is the preferred method of communicationamong teens, and the number of texts sent daily is increasing The volume ofteen texting has risen from 50 texts a day in 2009 to 60 texts a day in 2012 for the median teen texterJust 6% of teens use email daily, while 39% say they never use email
But the percent of teens who text daily with friends has remained flat since 2009The % of teens who text daily with friends has not changed since 2009% of all teens (regardless of cell ownership) Jul-11 49 17 3 3 28Sep-09 54 10 5 3 28Feb-08 38 7 8 5 41Nov-07 36 7 7 5 44Nov-06 27 9 8 7 49 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100% Every day Several times a week At least once a week Less than once a week Never/cannot do thisSource: The Pew Research Centers Internet & American Life Project, April 19 – July 14, 2011 Teen Survey. n=799 teens 12-17 and a parent or guardian.Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish, by landline and cell phone.
Adult Cell Phone Activities by Race/Ethnicity % of adult cell phone owners age 18+ within each group who do the following activities with their cell phone White, non- Black, non- Hispanic Hispanic Hispanic (n=1343) (n=232) (n=196) Send or receive text messages 70 76 83* Take a picture 71 70 79* Access the internet 39 56* 51* Send a photo or video to someone 52 58 61* Send or receive email 34 46* 43* Download an app 28 36* 36* Play a game 31 43* 40* Play music 27 45* 47* Record a video 30 41* 42* Access a social networking site 25 39* 35* Watch a video 21 33* 39* Post a photo or video online 18 30* 28* Check bank balance or do online banking 15 27* 25* *indicates statistically significant differences compared with whites. Source: The Pew Research Centers Internet & American Life Project, April 26 – May 22, 2011 Spring Tracking Survey. n=2,277 adults ages 18 and older, including 755 cell phone interviews. Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish.
How Phones Function In Adults’ Lives% of US adult cell owners who had done each of the following in the 30 days prior to the survey…
True or False? • Teens who text the most talk on the phone the least • On average, teen girls send more text messages per day than teen boys• Most of the growth in the number of texts sent per day over the past two years has been among 12-13 year-olds
Texters are also Talkers The heaviest texters are also the heaviest talkers… Heavy texters (who exchange more than 100 texts a day) are more likely than lighter texters to talk on their cell phone daily 69% of heavy texters talk daily on their cell phones, compared with 46% of medium texters (those exchanging 21-100 texts a day) and 43% of light texters (those exchanging 0-20 texts a day)
Number of text messages sent/received per day by different groups Much of the increase in(among teens who text) number of texts sent daily in Mean Median the past two years occurredAll teen text messaging users 167 60 among older teens ages 14-Gender 17, who went from a medianBoys 168 50 of 60 texts a day to a medianGirls 165 90 of 100 two years laterAge12-13 122 3014-17 181 100 Over that time, boys of allGender/Age ages increased their textingGirls 12-13 116 35 volume from a median of 30Boys 12-13 131 20 texts daily in 2009 to 50 textsGirls 14-17 187 100 in 2011Boys 14-17 176 50Race/Ethnicity Older teen girls remain theWhite, non-Hispanic 149 50Black, non-Hispanic 186 80 most enthusiastic texters,Hispanic 202 100 with a median of 100 texts aHousehold Income day in 2011, compared with 50Less than $30,000 212 100 for boys the same age$30,000-$49,999 162 60$50,000-$74,999 128 50 Black teens showed an$75,000+ 171 50 increase from a median of 60Source: The Pew Research Centers Internet & American Life Project, April 26 – May 22, 2011Teen/Parent Survey. n=799 teens ages 12-17 and a parent or guardian. Interviews were conducted in texts per day to 80English and Spanish, on landlines and cell phones.
True or False?• Teens love to use geolocation services on their phonessuch as Foursquare and Gowalla to share their location or check in with friends
Overall, just 6% of teens use location-based services on cell phonesLocation-based services and age Looking only at cell phone% of teens in each group who use location services on their phone users, 8% of teen cell usersAll teens 6% have used a geolocationTeens 12-13 * service on their cell phoneTeens 14-17 9 to “check in” or share theirAge locationAge 12 *Age 13 * Among adults, 5% of cellAge 14 2 owners (4% of all adults)Age 15 6 use their phones toAge 16 6 “check in” to locationsAge 17 19 using geosocial services such as Foursquare orSource: The Pew Research Centers Internet & American Life Project, Teen/Parent Survey,April 19 – July 14, 2011. n=799 teens 12-17 and a parent or guardian. Interviews wereconducted in English and Spanish, by landline and cell phone. * indicates less than 1%. Gowalla
True or False? • The vast majority of teens have recorded and uploaded video to the internet• Very few teens video chat using applications such as Skype, Googletalk or iChat
27% of Online Teens Record and Upload Video, While 37% Participate in Video Chats 27% of internet-using teens 12-17 record and upload video to the internet Today, online girls are just as likely to upload video as online boys, which was not the case in 2006 13% of internet-using teens stream video live to the internet for other people to watch 37% of internet users ages 12-17 participate in video chats with others using applications such as Skype, Googletalk or iChat Teen girls are more likely than boys to use video chat
13% of Online Teens Stream Live Video to the InternetBoys and girls are equally likely to stream video, as are younger and older teens As with all video sharing activities, social mediausers are more likely to report streaming video (14% of teen social media users stream video v. 5% of those who do not use these sites) 17% of daily social media site users stream, compared with 5% of teens who use social media sites less than weekly Teen Twitter users are the most likely to reportstreaming video, with one-quarter streaming video (v. 10% of teens who do not use Twitter) Teens with home broadband access (14%) are more likely to stream video than teens with dial-up access (3%)
True or False? • Twitter and Facebook are equally popular among teens • White teens are most likely to use Twitter• Teens and adults tend to use different social network sites • More teens report having an account on Twitter than on YouTube
Teens and Social Media UseTeen social network and Twitter use – trends over timeBased on teen internet users 100% 80% 80% 73% Use online 65% 60% social 60% 55% networking sites 40% Use Twitter 20% 16% 8% 0% Nov 2006 Nov 2007 Feb 2008 Sept 2009 July 2011 Source: The Pew Research Center Internet & American Life Project Teen & Parent surveys.
76% of ALL Teens are “Social Media Users”Facebook is the dominant social Girls are twice as likely to usemedia site among teens Twitter as boys• 93% of teen social media users • 22% of online girls use Twitter v. have a Facebook account 10% of online boys• MySpace ranks a distant second Black teens are 3 times as likely to at 24% be Twitter users as whites or LatinosThe percent of teens who use • Among online teens, 34% ofsocial network sites almost black teens use Twitter v. 11% ofdoubles between ages 12 and 13 white and 13% of Latino teens• 45% of online 12-year-olds use social network sites Twitter use is especially low among younger boys• That jumps to 82% among 13- year-old internet users • 2% of online boys ages 12-13 use Twitter
Most Teen Social Media Users Have Just One AccountAmong teen social media 59% of teen social media usersusers: have an account on just one site; 41% have accounts on • 93% have an account on multiple sites Facebook • 24% have an account on Among teens with one profile, MySpace 89% have a Facebook account • 12% have an account on Among teens with multiple Twitter accounts, 99% have a • 7% have an account on a Facebook account Yahoo site Social media account • 6% have an account on ownership for teen social YouTube media users is generally either • 2% have an account on each “Facebook only” or “Facebook of the following: Skype, plus another site or sites” myYearbook, and Tumblr In 2006, just 7% of teen social • 1% have an account on media profile owners said that Google Buzz Facebook was the profile they used most often
Facebook is Especially Dominant Among Some Teens • White teen social media • MySpace profiles users are most likely to • Young teenFacebook are most common MySpace Yahoo YouTube have Facebook accounts among Latino • Among teen social media (96% v. 87% of blacks teens (35% of social users (age and 88% of Latinos) Latino teen social media 12-13) are media users have users, boys more likely • Older teen social media an account v. 22% (9%) are than older users also more likely to of whites) more likely teens (14-17) have Facebook accounts than girls to have an (95% of 14-17 year-olds • Teen social media (3%) to have account on a v. 87% of those 12-13) users whose an account Yahoo site parents did not go on YouTube (12% v. 5%) • Teen social media users to college are whose parents have more likely to have been to college are more a MySpace likely than other teens to account (32% v. have Facebook accounts 18% of those (96% v. 89% among whose parents other teens) went to college
THEY AGREE ON SOMETHING! Adults and Teens Use the Same Social Media SitesOther than LinkedIn, teens and adults maintain online socialmedia accounts in the same places 87% of parents ofBased on teens/adults who use social network site(s) and/or Twitter teens 12-17 use 93%* the internet Facebook 87% 67% of parents of 24%* MySpace teens use social 14% Teens media sites 12% Twitter 10% Adults 39% of parents 0% have friended LinkedIn 11% their teenager on 0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% a social network siteSource: Teen data is from the Pew Research Centers Internet & American Life Teen-Parent survey, April 19-July 14, 2011.N=799 for teens 12-17 and parents, including oversample of minority families. Adult data is from Pew Internet’s AugustTracking survey, July 25-August 26, 2011. Nationally representative, n=2260 adults 18+, includes cell phone & Spanishlanguage interviews. * indicates a statistically significant difference between age groups.
39% of ALL Parents “Friend” their Teens on SNS Parents who friend their teens on social media are more likely to implement other online safety or parental control measures Nearly two-thirds (61%) of social media-using teens report that their parents have checked their social network site profile Friending parents on social media is associated with an increased likelihood of parent- child conflict over social media
True or False? • Teens who use social network sites are on them all the time •The most popular activity for teens on social network sites is posting photos/videos•Girls are more likely than boys to post photos and videos to social media sites
64% of Teen SNS Users Use the Sites DailyFrequency of use of social networking sites% of SNS users in each age group who use social networking sites this frequently Teens (12-17) 40% 24% 13% 12% 6% 5% Millennials (18-34) 42% 22% 13% 12% 5% 6% GenX (35-46) 29% 23% 19% 13% 6% 9% Younger Boomers (47-56) 22% 17% 17% 23% 14% 8% Older Boomers (57-65) 21% 25% 15% 19% 7% 12% Seniors (65+) 15% 19% 17% 22% 9% 18% All adult SNS users 33% 22% 15% 15% 7% 8% 0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% Several times a day About once a day 3-5 days per week 1-2 days per week Every few weeks Less OftenSource: The Pew Research Centers Internet & American Life Project, July 25 – August 26, 2011 Summer Tracking Survey. n=1,716 adults social networking site users. Interviewswere conducted in English and Spanish and on landline and cell phones. Teen data come from The Pew Research Centers Internet & American Life Teen-Parent survey, April 19-July 14, 2011. N=799 for teens 12-17 and parents, including oversample of minority families. Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish and on landline and cell phones
IM and Chat are More Popular Activities on SNS than Posting Photos/VideosHow teens use social media sitesBased on teens who use social network sites or TwitterSend instant messages or chat with a friend through the social network site 88%Post comments on something a friend has posted 87Post a status update 86Post a photo or video 80Send private messages to a friend within the social network site 76Tag people in posts, photos or videos 69Play a game on a social network site 50Median # of activities 6Source: The Pew Research Centers Internet & American Life Teen-Parent survey, April 19-July 14, 2011. N=799 for teens 12-17 and parents, includingoversample of minority families. Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish.
Older Teen SNS Users Are More Likely to Engage in Most SNS Activities (Other Than Playing Games and Chatting)How older and younger teens use social mediaBased on social network site or Twitter users Overall, teen girls and boys Ages 12-13 (n=123) Ages 14-17 (n=500) use social media Post comments on friends 73% posts 92%* sites in similar ways… 73% Post a status update 90%* 84% Teen girls are Send IMs or chat with friends 89% more likely to use Post a photo or video 68% SNS to post photos 84%* or videos (88% of Send private messages to 67% girl social media friends 79% users do this, Tag people in posts, photos or 59% videos 73%* compared with 71% 69%* of boys) and to tag Play games 44% other people 0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% (79% vs. 60%)Source: The Pew Research Centers Internet & American Life Teen-Parent survey, April 19-July 14, 2011. N=799 for teens 12-17 and parents, including oversample of minority families. Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish. * indicatesstatistically significant difference between groups.
True or False? • Most teens don’t care about online privacy• Most teens will post anything online without thinking about how it might impact them in the future
Most Teens Use Privacy Settings on Social Media SitesTeens’ privacy settings on social media sitesBased on teen SNS or Twitter users (n=623) 2% 17% Public Partially Private 19% 62% Private (friends only) Dont know / RefusedSource: The Pew Research Centers Internet & American Life Teen-Parent survey, April 19-July 14, 2011. n=799 for teens and parents, includingoversample of minority families. Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish. Adult data from Pew Internet’s August 2011 Tracking survey withadults 18+, July 25-August 26, 2011. n=2260.
Most Teens Think Before They Post• More than half of online teens (55%) say they decided not to post something online out of concern that it might reflect poorly on them in the future• Older teen internet users (ages 14-17) are more likely than younger teens (12- 13) to have reconsidered posting content online after thinking about the possibility of negative implications (59% vs. 46%)• Online teens age 17—likely to be preparing for or in the midst of college and job applications—report the highest levels of digital withholding.• Two-thirds of online teens age 17 (67%) say they decided not to post something online because they thought it may reflect badly on them in the future• Online girls ages 14-17 (63%) are more likely than the youngest boys ages 12-13 (40%) to have refrained from posting content because it might affect how they are perceived in the future. However, this difference may be due to older girls being more frequent internet users and social media posters
True or False? • Most teens have been bullied on social network sites•Most teens say people their age are “unkind” to one another on social network sites •Teens are more likely to be bullied online than offline
Teen and Adult Social Media Users Equally Likely to Say Someone Has Been Cruel to Them Personally on SNSIn the past 12 months when you have been on a social network site, has anyonebeen mean or cruel to you?% of teen and adult social media usersSource: The Pew Research Centers Internet & American Life Teen-Parent survey, April 19-July 14, 2011. n=799 for teens and parents, including oversampleof minority families. Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish. Adult data from Pew Internet’s August 2011 Tracking survey with adults 18+, July25-August 26, 2011. n=2260. There are no statistically significant differences reflected in this chart.
Teen Social Media Users Witness Online Cruelty and Meanness More Frequently Than AdultsHow often do you witness online cruelty and meanness?% of teen and adult social media users* indicates a statistically significant difference between bars.Source: The Pew Research Centers Internet & American Life Teen-Parent survey, April 19-July 14, 2011. n=799 for teens and parents, including oversample ofminority families. Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish. Adult data from Pew Internet’s August 2011 Tracking survey with adults 18+, July 25-August 26, 2011. n=2260.
The Majority of Both Teen and Adult SNS Users Say People Their Age Are Mostly Kind to One Another on SNS Overall, in your experience, are people your age mostly kind or mostly unkind to one another on social network sites? % of teen and adult SNS users
Black Teens, Urban Teens, and Girls 12-13 are More Likely to Say Peers are “Mostly Unkind” on SNS How peers treat one another on social media % of teen social media users Mostly Kind Mostly Unkind Depends Dont Know Race/ethnicity White 72%* 20%* 9% 0% Black 56% 31%* 9% 4% Hispanic 78%* 9% 13% 0% Location Urban 68% 23%* 8% 0% Suburban 73% 14% 13% 0% Rural 57% 28% 12% 3% Age + sex Girls 12-13 65% 33%* 3% 0% Boys 12-13 77% 9% 14% 0% Girls 14-17 67% 20% 13% 0% Boys 14-17 69% 18% 12% 1% Source: The Pew Research Centers Internet & American Life Teen-Parent survey, April 19-July 14, 2011. N=799 for teens and parents, including oversample of minority families. Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish.* indicates statistically significant difference between rows within each column and section. In sections with +, the data point with the * is only statistically significantly different than the data points with + symbol.
Yet, Asked For One Word That Describes How Peers Behave on SNS, Most Teens Use Negative Terms
“How Should Teens Behave on SNS?
Teens Are More Likely to Be Bullied In Person Than By Text or OnlineIn the past 12 months, have you been bullied ____?% of all teensSource: The Pew Research Centers Internet & American Life Teen-Parent survey, April 26-July 14, 2011. n=799 for teens and parents, including oversample ofminority families. Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish.
True or False?• Teen social network site use leads to many bad experiences, such as fights, lost friendships, and getting in trouble at school•Adults have very few negative experiences, and many more positive experiences, resulting from SNS use compared with teens
Teen SNS Users More Likely Than Adults to Report Negative OutcomesNegative outcomes from SNS site use% of SNS-using adults and teens who have had these experiences because of things that happened on SNS Gotten into trouble at 6% work/school 3% 8% Gotten into a physical fight 3% Caused a problem with 13% the family 11% Resulted in face-to-face 25% argument 12% 22% Ended a friendship 15% 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% Teen SNS users Adult SNS usersSource: Adult data come from the Pew Research Centers Internet & American Life Project, July 25 – August 26, 2011 Summer Tracking Survey. n=1,716 adults socialnetworking site users and Twitter users. Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish and on landline and cell phones. Teen data come from The Pew ResearchCenters Internet & American Life Teen-Parent survey, April 19-July 14, 2011. N=799 for teens 12-17 and parents, including oversample of minority families. Interviewswere conducted in English and Spanish and on landline and cell phones.
Teen and Adult SNS Users Are Equally Likely to Report Positive OutcomesPositive experiences on social networking sites% of SNS-using adults and teens who have had these experiences because of things that happened on SNSSource: Adult data come from the Pew Research Centers Internet & American Life Project, July 25 – August 26, 2011 Summer Tracking Survey. n=1,716 adults social networkingsite users and Twitter users. Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish and on landline and cell phones. Teen data come from The Pew Research Centers Internet &American Life Teen-Parent survey, April 19-July 14, 2011. N=799 for teens 12-17 and parents, including oversample of minority families. Interviews were conducted in English andSpanish and on landline and cell phones.
Adults are generally more positive than teens about their experiences on social networking sites • As a rule, more adults than teens reported positive results on SNS. A higher proportion of adults than teens say people their age are mostly kind on social networking sites • And significantly smaller proportions of adults have had bad outcomes based on their SNS use such as confrontations, lost friendships, family strife, and fights • Overall, 41% of SNS-using teens have had at least one of the bad experiences asked about, compared with 26% of the SNS-using adults • But adults and teens are equally likely to experience positive outcomes
True or False? • Teens get most of their advice about how to behave online from peers • Most parents do not know enough or take the time to advise their teens on digital citizenship and online safety•Over time, parents are becoming less vigilant about their teens’ online behavior•Parents of girls are more engaged in monitoring their teens online behavior than parents of boys
Teens Say Parents Are The Biggest Influence on Online and Cell Phone BehaviorWho has been the biggest influence on what you think isappropriate or inappropriate when you are using a cellphone or going online?% of teens who use the internet or cell phones (n=778)Source: The Pew Research Centers Internet & American Life Teen-Parent survey, April 19-July 14, 2011. N=799teens and parents, including oversample of minority families. Interviews conducted in English and Spanish.
Where Teens Get Advice About Online SafetyBased on % of teen technology users (n=778) TV, radio, Sibling or Parents Teacher newspapers, or Friend Older relative cousin magazines (media) 86% 70% 54% 46% 45% 45%GenderBoys 83% 65% 42% 40% 38% 38%Girls 89% 75%* 67%* 53%* 53%* 54%*Age12 to 13 88% 70% 54% 50%* 44% 56%*14 to 17 85% 70% 54% 45% 46% 40%RaceWhite 88% 74% 51% 42%+ 45% 39%+African American 80% 67% 62% 51% 50% 63%*Latino 82% 64% 55% 58%* 49% 52%*Household IncomeLess than $50K 84% 69% 58% 54%* 49% 52%*$50 or more 87% 70% 53% 40% 44% 40%Note: * indicates statistically significant difference between rows. For sections with + symbols, the data points accompanied by an asterisk * are only statisticallysignificant relative to the data point marked with a + in the same column.Source: The Pew Research Centers Internet & American Life Teen-Parent survey, April 19-July 14, 2011. N=799 for teens and parents, including oversample ofminority families. Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish.
Parents and Teens Communicate About Online SafetyParents and teens report they talk together about online safety“Have you ever talked about…?” (% of teen internet or cell phone users, and % of parents of those teens)Source: The Pew Research Centers Internet & American Life Teen-Parent survey, April 19-July 14, 2011. N=799 for teens and parents, including oversample ofminority families. Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish.* indicates statistically significant difference between bars. Also note -- the phrasing in the chartreflects the wording asked of teens. The questions asked of parents did not include references to cell phones, but were otherwise identical.
Parents Today are More Vigilant About Monitoring Teen Online BehaviorPercent of parents who check what sites their teen hasvisited Parents in higher-% of parents of online teens income households and those with at least a high school diploma are more likely than others to check up on their teen’s online travels The age and gender of the teenager are not associated with this kind of parental monitoringSource: The Pew Research Centers Internet & American Life Teen-Parent surveys. All available at pewinternet.org
Most Parents of Teens Use Parental Controls More than half of parents use parental controls to manage teens’ internet access Another third use parental controls on teens’ mobile phones Parents of young teen boys (age 12-13) are the most likely to restrict their teen’s cell use 17% of all parents use both forms of parental controls 41% do not use any parental controls

THANK YOU!!All data available at: pewinternet.org Kristen Purcell, Ph.D. Associate Director, Research Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project kpurcell@pewinternet.org Twitter: @pewinternet @kristenpurcell

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