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![]() Will the real Gen Y please stand up
by Neil Howe and William Strauss Is the narcissism
of young people a fearsome national problem? Absolutely, according to a
new study by San Diego State psychology professor Jean Twenge. In a book published
last year, "Generation
Me," and a new report issued this week, Twenge draws a portrait of
under-socialized young people fated to depression, self-destruction,
violence and civic decay as they grow older. The study's
conclusions fuel endless negative media commentary on today's kids that
will always find an audience — stories about crime, cheating, sexual
license and celebrity worship. No matter what
teens say on surveys, there is scant evidence that they act more
selfishly. In fact, the trends in youth behavior support the opposite
conclusion — namely, that Millennials have much greater regard for each
other, their parents and the community than Gen X'ers or baby boomers
had at the same phase of life. According to the
highly regarded annual Monitoring the Future survey, cigarette and
alcohol consumption in grades 8, 10 and 12 are now at their lowest
levels since the survey began in 1975. The rate of illicit drug use is
much lower for today's kids than it was for their parents when they
were in high school. Record numbers
claim they "share their parents values" or "have no problem with any
family member." Increasingly they
say they want to live near their parents later in life — a reassuring
prospect if Social Security collapses under the demographic weight of
the boomers. According to the
UCLA College Freshman survey, 76% of new college arrivals, a record
high, now say that "raising a family" is a very important goal — and a
record low, only 27%, agree that "realistically, there is little an
individual can do to change society." The original Me
Generation has spent a lifetime obsessed with the journey within. Thanks to boomers,
a vocabulary of self-esteem and self-love so permeates today's schools
and media that professors like Twenge can now blame kids for obligingly
repeating it back to them on personality tests. If they flock to
social network sites for mutual support, that's a sign of me-first
showboating. If youth suicide rates have fallen, that's only because of
new drug therapies. In order to claim that kids are "more miserable
than ever before," Twenge needs to deny that they're emotionally
healthier. Neil Howe and
William Strauss are the authors of the books "Generations" and "Millennials
Rising." > Related article on Professor Twenge's study: Gen Y's ego trip takes a nasty turn ~ ~ ~
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