Entries in Cell Phones (10)
The Dangers of Texting
August 1, 2008
An article on the telegraph.co.uk website has reported that people who text message excessively may be risking some serious injury. What teen’s have referred to for years as “texter’s thumb” now has experts worried that by spending so much time pressing small keys on phones that are not ergonomically designed, a large portion of young people will be suffering from swelling in the thumb and wrist as well as pain in the hands, wrists, shoulders and neck. The Chartered Society of Physiotherapy has released research that shows that as many as 1 in 6 young people could be suffering from pain associated with text messaging and they have issued a number of tips for safe texting. You can read the full story and the tips here. Frankly, I think the development of conditions like “texter’s thumb” and carpal tunnel as a result of texting or too much computer use are kind of our bodies way of saying “lay off the technology.” If your thumbs are swollen from text messaging it may be a good sign that you shouldn’t be text messaging so much.
Libraries adding Video Games, Movies kicking the habit, Gossip Girl crossing the line - again, Schools Go Green, Online teen dating dangers, McCain, Obama, and the Millenials.
July 21, 2008
Libraries adding video games. The American Library Association has announced a new project funded with a $1 million grant from the Verizon Foundation, the charitable branch of Verizon Communications. The project will place video gaming systems like XBOX 360’s and Wii’s in public libraries and will then will be studied to see how video gaming affects the literacy skills of young people. This is an interesting way for libraries to adapt to the changing interests of today’s youth in order to remain relevant. Read the full story here…Summer camps place cell phones, electronics on hold. In our ultra-connected world, young campers are learning to be without their Ipod’s, cell phones, and video games. Read the full story…
Movie Studios Agree To Help Discourage Teen Smoking. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control says teenagers are twice as likely to pick up the habit if they see cigarette smoking in movies, on television, or in cigarette ads. Also, tobacco companies use menthol flavor to get young people to smoke, says a new study to be published in the American Journal of Public Health. To combat this glamorization of smoking motion picture studios will be placing commercials discouraging smoking on DVD copies of films that depict characters smoking. Read the full story…
Gossip girl goes too far again. As an inappropriate follow-up to April’s edgy marketing of WB’s Gossip GIrl series (picture at left), the network has once again pushed the envelope. The series seems to be capitalizing on the criticism it has received from parent groups that have taken issue with the series’ sex and drug riddled plots involving teens. Click here to see the current marketing images…
VA School may “Go Green” and implement a 4-day school week. Read the story here...
Teens listening to more FM Radio. After a 2007 study suggested that most teens are listneing to less radio than they had in the past, a new study has stated that teens report increasing radio listening this year. While the reason for this is unknown I would speculate that young people find it easier to flip on a radio rather than constantly be flipping through songs on an Ipod. Additionally, in our connected world, listening to the radio creates a greater feeling of being linked with the outside world than an MP3 player. Read the story here…
“Playground for pedophiles”. A new teen dating site called MyLOL.net is receiving criticism that it will become a “playground for pedophiles”. With 19,000 worldwide members (150 of which are males over 40) the site has become the top teen dating site on the net. Read the full story here. / View video here.
Queen Bees, Parents getting Kidsick, Facebook Dance Parties, Tech Language, Tech in the Classroom, Skin Cancer in teens.
July 16, 2008 New teen show ‘Queen Bees’ Premiere’s on the N
From the lands of backstabbery and fakeness, the brats have come. Gisbelle and Stassi and Camille, from Trophy Club, Tex., and Shavon, Michelle, Kiana and Brittany have come to your television to compete on a reality show that totters between “so bad it’s good” and “so bad it’s bad and makes you question yourself and humanity.” And we are talking serious nasties, dude, girls who fake pregnancies and then miscarriages to win attention, who refuse to hang out with their “ugly” friends and “don’t really feel bad for homeless people.” Or say so. They are mean. But through the course of this show, they shall become nice. Or pretend to. For $25,000. This is the premise of “Queen Bees,” which premieres tonight at 9 on cable channel the N Network and can also be seen at The-N.com. It represents the latest incarnation of a mean girls frenzy that began with Rosalind Wiseman’s 2002 book “Queen Bees and Wannabes.” They’re the girls who start ruining life for everybody else in middle school. Read the full story…
Helicopter Parents Freak Out As Kids Go Off To Camp
Eve Pidgeon watched the large group of kids, many of them laughing and chatting excitedly as they boarded a bus for camp last summer. “They just couldn’t wait,” said Pidgeon, whose 8-year-old daughter, Zoe, was among the young campers. Then Pidgeon looked around and noticed something else: “There were no children crying — just parents.” These days, camp leaders and family counselors say it is an increasingly common dynamic. It used to be the homesick kid begging to come home from camp. While that still happens, they have noticed that it is often parents who have more trouble letting go. They call it “kidsickness,” a condition attributed in large part to today’s more involved style of parenting. Observers also say it is only being exacerbated by our ability to be in constant contact by cell phone and computer, as well as many parents’ perception that the world is a more dangerous place. Read the full story…
With school events limited, teens use Facebook to draw big crowds to private parties
When Cliff Sheckles decided to host a dance, he didn’t call everyone he knew and invite them. He didn’t put up posters or hand out fliers. He just logged on to Facebook. The then-sophomore at the Lakeside School ended up playing host to 1,200 people at his April event in the South Lake Union Naval Armory building, his seven-person security staff holding up a line of boys as if at a nightclub — a far cry from teenage sock hops of yesteryear. Large-scale private dances, like the one he coordinated, have been easier to promote since Facebook opened its doors to high school students several years ago. And a recent decision by Seattle Public Schools to limit high schools to three dances a year — down from six or seven at some schools — seems to have added fuel to the fire. Read the ful story…
NPR: Teens, Tech And Language: A Tired Old Tale Retold
From the telegraph to the typewriter to the text message, every new technology inspires rhapsodies about the effect it’ll have on language — especially the language of the young. In his commentary, Fresh Air’s resident linguist points out that language — and the young — somehow manage to survive. Listen to the story on NPR.org…
Technology reshapes America’s classrooms
From online courses to kid-friendly laptops and virtual teachers, technology is spreading in America’s classrooms, reducing the need for textbooks, notepads, paper and in some cases even the schools themselves. Just ask 11-year-old Jemella Chambers. She is one of 650 students who receive an Apple Inc laptop each day at a state-funded school in Boston. From the second row of her classroom, she taps out math assignments on animated education software that she likens to a video game. Read the full story…
Melanoma surges in young women
Increasing numbers of younger women continue to receive diagnoses of the most dangerous form of skin cancer even as the rate of new cases has leveled off in younger men, federal health officials reported yesterday. An analysis of government cancer statistics from 1973 to 2004 found that the rate of new melanoma cases in younger women had jumped 50 percent since 1980 but did not increase for younger men in that period. Read the full story…
Nokia Lolitas, Bully-Suicide Connection, High Tech Bullying, Disney bucking trends, U.S. lagging in teen pregnancy, Using cell phones to avoid moms.
July 15, 2008 The Nokia Lolitas: A combustible mix of minors, sex and technology
It’s a sultry early Friday night in downtown Fairfield and a pod of teenagers has converged at the local 7-11 for the free Slurpees being given away in celebration of July 11, aka 7/11. The teens are armed with all the tech you’d expect from suburban kids of some means, raised in the age of cell phones and the Internet. Instead of riding Razor Scooters, they’re talking on Razr V3 fully-loaded phones and listening to tunes on their iPods. As the new tech has taken hold, it’s been accompanied by a spike in amateur, do-it-yourself exhibitionism. It’s a sexual revolution that’s trickling down to teens, who are experimenting with sexuality in a way that’s more public than ever before. Read the full story…
Studies Suggest, But Don’t Confirm, Bullying-Suicide Connection
Researchers have repeatedly found signs of an apparent connection between bullying and suicide in children, according to a new review of studies from 13 countries. Nevertheless, there is no definitive evidence that bullying makes kids more likely to kill themselves. Still, “once we see that there’s an association, we can act on it and try to prevent it,” said review lead author Dr. Young-Shin Kim, an assistant professor at Yale University School of Medicine’s Child Study Center. According to international studies, bullying is common and affects anywhere from 9 percent to 54 percent of children. In the United States, many have blamed bullying for spurring acts of violence, including the Columbine High School massacre. Read the full story…
Cyberbullying grows bigger and meaner with photos, video
Ricky Alatorre doesn’t know which classmate surreptitiously hoisted a cellphone camera and snapped his picture or exactly when it happened. All Ricky, 16, knows is the fuzzy yet distinguishable portrait of him in English class showed up on MySpace, on a page that claimed to be his. And the fake profile, titled “The Rictionary,” not only identified his school but also said Ricky loved dictionaries — a swipe at his school smarts — and was gay (he’s not), one of the most common schoolyard taunts. Read the full story…
Disney bucks music industry downturn
While many music industry executives are crying in their soup, Walt Disney Music Group’s Damon Whiteside is singing “Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah.” Whiteside, senior vice president of marketing of Walt Disney Records, saw a whopping 60 percent rise in music sales from 2006 to 2007 because of the tween and young-teen music craze led by Disney star Miley Cyrus. Meanwhile, overall music industry sales were down 17 percent in the same period because of digital downloads and pirated music online. “It’s thanks to the tween and younger teens that the music business is staying alive,” Whiteside said here at the YPulse 2008 National Mashup, a two-day conference about teens and technology. Read the full story…
Teen Pregnancy: Why the U.S. Lags Behind Europe
Of all the industrialized countries in the world, the U.S. has, by far, the highest instance of teenage pregnancies with a rate that more than doubles the nearest competitors. After posting on the topic earlier this week, I did some further research and came up with some common sense answers as to why this is. One of the best sources I found was Advocates for Youth. Each summer since in 1998, Advocates for Youth and the University of North Carolina at Charlotte sponsor annual study tours to France, Germany, and the Netherlands to explore why adolescent sexual health outcomes are so much more positive in the three European countries than in the U.S. The following italicized bulleted points are from their most recent findings. Here I will go point and counter point with what the Europeans do successfully and our U.S. reality—buckle up! Read the full story…
Cell phone is mom-avoidance device for teens
Tweens and teens are pushing parents to adopt text messaging so they don’t have to talk “live” over the cell phone, according to mobile phone executives. A typical teenager carrying a cell phone might let mom’s call roll over to voicemail and then immediately text her back, “What going on?,” according to Stephen Saiz, manager of consumer insight and strategy of the Walt Disney Internet Group’s North American mobile division. “Teens are pushing their parents to go on mobile because they don’t really want to communicate with them directly,” Saiz said here on a panel of mobile executives at the YPulse 2008 National Mashup, a two-day conference on teens and technology. He said later in an interview that his Disney division researches teens’ and parents’ behavior on the cell phone and with its mobile applications. The majority of older audiences using Disney mobile applications skew to mothers who are goaded there by their kids, he said. And most tweens and teens prefer to text message and instant chat with parents and friends rather than talk directly so that they can continue doing other things like play video games with friends, he said. Read the full story…
Teen Headlines: July 1, 2008
July 1, 2008 USMagazine.com: Heidi Montag wants to record a Christian Album.
There is a different side to Heidi Montag that you don’t see on MTV’s The Hills, the 21-year-old budding singer tells USA Today. “I have been the most religious person since I was 2 years old. I always felt this crazy connection to God,” says Montag, who identifies herself as “kind of non-denominational Baptist.” Montag — who just released her latest single “Fashion” and frequently reads the Bible — says she even wants to record a Christian album. She adds that she once planned on devoting her life to God as a missionary in Africa. Read the full story…
US News & World Report: Housing crisis popular with popular teens.
While the housing bust is threatening to drag the entire economy into a debilitating recession, it’s great news for the teenage party scene. With a wanton lack of sympathy for the mortgage meltdown and ensuing credit crisis, teenagers in one California community are using abandoned foreclosed homes as venues for unchaperoned—and presumably “raging”—drinking parties. Read the full story…
Minneapolis Star tribune: Teens who speed may soon meet cars that tattle.
Here’s one way to get teen drivers off the cell phone: Make them hook it up to the speedometer and automatically text Mom and Dad whenever the car is speeding. The phones could conceivably keep track of such things as the number of passengers in the car, whether they’re wearing seatbelts and even monitor the volume of the stereo. Read the full story…
New York Times: Teen cruising declines as gas prices rise.
For car-loving American teenagers, this is turning out to be the summer the cruising died. Kevin Ballschmiede, 16, pined for his 1999 Dodge Ram — “my pride and joy” — the other night as he hung out in a parking lot in this town outside Chicago. Given that filling the 26-gallon tank can now cost more than $100, he had left it at home and caught a ride. From coast to coast, American teenagers appear to be driving less this summer. Police officers who keep watch on weekend cruising zones say fewer youths are spending their time driving around in circles, with more of them hanging out in parking lots, malls or movie theaters. Read the full story…
Kansas City Star: Growing modesty movement shows teens they can be stylish without revealing too much
Low-cut camis and short dresses may be the rage in fashion and celebrity magazines, but many young women say the styles expose too much, especially during summer. They’ve turned to faith-based organizations for help. The modesty movement, as it’s called, is gaining support from religious leaders who say it’s time to cover up. Religious groups have promoted modest-themed fashion shows and proms, and referred brides-to-be to shops that sell modest gowns. This month, hundreds attended the sold-out Pure Fashion Show at Arden Hills Resort Club & Spa in Sacramento, Calif. The Friday night show featured local teens from various churches modeling modest fashion from casual wear to evening formals. Read the full story…
TIME: Should you drink with your teen?
The data indicate there are fewer young drinkers, but a greater proportion of them are hard-core drinkers. Parents have helped create this paradox. Many parents seem torn between two competing impulses: officially, most say in surveys that they oppose any drinking by those under 21. But unofficially many also seem to think kids will be kids—after all, not so long ago, they were themselves drinking as teens. A few of these parents have even allowed their kids to have big drunken parties at home. Read the full story…
Teen Headlines: June 30, 2008
June 30, 2008 What Are Youth Watching on their Phones?
There is a lot of noise about mobile video lately. Just the other day, MoCoNews reported that 90 percent of Venture Capitalists in a poll said mass adoption of mobile video will take off in the next five years, and 60 percent expect it will happen within the next three years. The question seems to be WHAT we will be watching. The answer could differ for teens and adults. The latter, it seems, enjoy watching mobile video in-transit or between activities. Mobile phones, in and of themselves, are, to some degree, founded on the principle of multi-tasking – i.e. being able to do certain things while involved in other activities. Read the full story…
AP: Poll: Schools not properly preparing kids.
Half of Americans say U.S. schools are doing only a fair to poor job preparing kids for college and the work force. Even more feel that way about the skills kids need to survive as adults, an Associated Press poll released Friday finds.
“A lot of kids, when they get out school, are kind of lost,” said Jamie Norton, a firefighter in Gridley, Calif. “When you get out of high school, what are you educated to do?” Read the full story…
Teens, church hold different views of oral sex
More than 10 years after President Clinton made the argument that oral sex isn’t really sex, a generation of adolescents seems to agree. Defining chastity was a prominent issue of two religious youth conferences earlier this month, one for Catholics in Boca Raton and another for Mormons in Miramar. Although church and school leaders say they have become more explicit in their teachings, 70 percent of 14- to 19-year-olds still don’t consider oral sex to be sex, according to a 2007 study in the Journal of Adolescent Health. Read the full story…
MultiMedia Intelligence: Teen Mobile Market Running Out of Steam as Subscribers Reach the Saturation Point.
The US 12-17 teen cellular subscribers surpassed 16 million in 2007, according to market research and consultancy firm MultiMedia Intelligence. This is up 12% from 2006. By 2012, the number of teen subscribers will reach 17 million, a delta of only 1 million subscribers from 2007. Wireless penetration rates for teens are reaching saturation, resulting in stagnating growth. Since the teen market is not a multiple handset demographic, subscriber growth is forced to slow. “The teen market has been the ‘golden child’ for cellular providers in the US,” according to Frank Dickson, Chief Research Officer for MultiMedia Intelligence. “In addition to growing subscribers, teen ARPU has been growing higher than that of the overall market. Teens simply use their phones to do more, from text messaging to purchasing premium content. However, pricing pressures and teen cellular saturation are bringing an end to the teen cellular gold rush.” Read the full story…
Teens go green.
As evident from the large number of performers touring on bio-diesel buses, organic cotton T-shirts lining store racks and eco-friendly residences featured on reality shows, the world as teens know it is turning green. Teens are responding to the push for environmentalism by making green lifestyle changes and raising awareness about this prominent issue.
Doomsday grammarians are not in the mood to LOL. They worry that a language apocalypse is approaching, triggered by a new wave of technological pidgin. For decades, they say, language has been sliding toward increased informality, but as online chatting and cell-phone text messaging have become major channels of communication, they have seen signs of doom. A recent survey, by the Pew Internet and American Life Project, found that a quarter of teenagers sprinkled emoticons like the well-worn smiley face into schoolwork, while twice as many flouted capitalization and punctuation rules. Read the full story…
Teens’ Digital Yearbook.
Christina Le sat down with a phone book the first week of school and began cold-calling local businesses. As the yearbook business manager at Oxnard High School in Oxnard, Calif., the senior hoped selling ads would keep the yearbook class afloat. “They listened to my spiel,” Le said, but it has gotten harder to persuade them to buy. Most of the revenue has instead come from selling about 1,050 of the yearbooks to students. That’s a 35 percent purchase rate at the school of 3,000, and so far, it has stayed stable and high enough to keep up with costs. Lagging sales or not, yearbook classes say they must work harder and get more creative each year to keep the long-standing tradition alive. High school yearbooks generally receive no subsidies and must pay their own way. Read the full story…
Teen Headlines: June 24, 2008
June 24, 2008 Health Alert: Teen teeth whitening
The desire for whiter, brighter teeth is trickling down to teens and even younger. Kids across the country are bleaching their pearly whites, often without their parents knowledge. But there are some things you can do to help them avoid tooth trouble. Girls and boys alike, from elementary to high school, are white hot about bleaching their teeth.
Dr. David Carroll, a dentist, said, “Kids are under a lot of pressure, as adults are, to look and to feel to look good, to have white teeth.” Read the full story…
NBC10.com: Experts Say Teen Drivers Want Parents’ Help
New research was made public on Tuesday about teenage drivers and what parents could do to keep their kids safe.
The information comes just a day after a 16-year-old driver, who had his junior license for just six days, lost control of his SUV, killing himself and a 16-year-old passenger. Dr. Dennis Durbin from Children’s Hospital, has analyzed how and why new drivers wind up injured or in fatal accidents. “Literally overnight, teens go from their lowest to their highest lifetime risk of getting in a fatal crash the day they get their license,” he said. “They get that license and I think a lot of people think that’s a license that shows that they can drive. But it’s really not — it just showed that they passed a test that allows them to get on the road.” Read the full story…
Metroactive: Generation Debt.
He was your typical college kid who was persuaded to sign up for his first credit card, right there on the San Jose State campus. It didn’t take long for Rance Bobo to max out that card when he bought a bike. After that, he signed up for a few more cards, using them to buy clothes and stuff for school. The debt started catching up to him, so he decided to take out student loans to pay it off and help make ends meet. By the time Bobo left college, he was $20,000 in the hole. That didn’t stop him from taking out another 20 grand for a car loan. More than a decade later, Bobo, now 30, is still chipping away at his $30,000 tab. Even if he is saddled with debt, with no end in sight, Bobo’s not losing any sleep over it. He finds it hard to save money, often tempted to spend it on nice clothes and the latest technology. He describes his penchant for living beyond his means as a mark of his generation, one made up of folks who will drop $4 on a coffee drink without a second thought, and pride themselves on having the latest gadget in hand. Read the full story…
Through a Teacher’s Eyes: Schools, culture sending the wrong message on teen pregnancy.
“Carol get hooked up” was the subject of an email I received this morning from “urbangiftcardonus@….” Associating it with Urban Outfitters in Cambridge, I opened it. I should have known better. It was a “gift” card offer from FabFlyGear.com, selling clothing by Sean “Diddy” Combs, 50 Cent, Jay-Z, and Eminem. Frankly, if my mind were not on writing this column in response to the Gloucester High School pregnancy debacle, I would have simply put it in the trash. However, since I have visited Urban Outfitters from time to time, mostly out of curiosity, I decided there might be something on sale there that could help me shape an argument to explain what needs to be done if we are to save nearly an entire generation of youngsters from dissolution. Read the full column…
Business Week: What Do Teens Want?
Nearly 59,000 captive teens might seem like every parent’s worst nightmare. But for Helsinki (Finland)-based Sulake, such a group provided a pain-free way to gain valuable insight into what “kids these days” really care about. Pain-free because Sulake runs Habbo, the nine-year-old virtual world that as of early June had some 100 million avatars, 9.5 million of them active on the site each month. And because Sulake could use the world as a platform to question the teens—virtually. Habbo’s second Global Youth Survey features the results of a two-month-long poll conducted at the end of last year, which surveyed 58,486 teens in 31 countries. The findings were recently published in a 255-page report targeted at companies looking to market to the lucrative demographic. Read the full story…
Teens and cell cams: Striking a pose?
Many families preserve history through photos. Often, a trip to grandma’s would seem incomplete without a trip down memory lane via the big book of pictures. These days, electronic media dominates everything from the way we listen to music, communicate and save images. Almost every cell phone has a built-in camera, which has some parents concerned – for good reason. According to a recent report by the Associated Press, more and more teens are taking inappropriate photos of themselves, often wearing little or no clothing, and sending them to prospective boyfriends or girlfriends. More worrisome, these photos, once on the Internet, are accessible to practically anyone. Read the full story…
Hollywood Urged To To Rid Child Movies Of Smoking
It’s been one year since the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) pledged to make the movies that children see smokefree. But nothing has been done to put that pledge into practice. “One year later, we are still waiting for Hollywood to do the right thing,” state Health Commissioner Richard F. Daines, M.D., said today. “The MPAA must act now to protect children from the harmful influence of movie stars smoking gratuitously on film. We cannot sacrifice the health of another generation through indifference and inaction.” Read the full story…
Study: Teens dropping rags, radio for web, games, and TV
A new study reminds us of a trend we’d rather not think too much about: teens and “tweens” are reading less, instead spending more time surfing the web, playing games, and watching TV. More teens than ever sharing—and restricting—content online. The Tween & Teen Lifestyle Report is conducted twice a year (spring and fall), with the most recent study carried out in March 2008 (the results were just published). This time around, 1,182 teens (ages 13 to 17) and tweens (ages 8 to 12) were interviewed in-person, and the results confirm a continuing three-year trend of kids putting down the magazines and books, and picking up the mouse, controller, and remote. Read the full story…
Reuters UK: Cellfire aiming coupons at teens
Mobile coupon provider Cellfire is looking to expand its advertising customer base to include teen retailers and consumer product makers, its chief executive said on Wednesday. Cellfire users receive coupons and discounts on their cell phones from such companies as Hardee’s, Domino’s Pizza Inc, McDonald’s Corp, 1-800-Flowers.com Inc and Peet’s Coffee & Tea Inc. Speaking at the Reuters Consumer and Retail Summit, CEO Brent Dusing said retailers and others who market to teenagers are looking for new ways to reach customers. “If you want to reach them (teenagers) with a promotion, it’s very difficult to reach them in the paper world, of course, because your customer demographics are not reading the newspaper. They’re not checking the mail at home, and they’re probably not going to online coupon sites,” he said. “But they are on the phone, all the time.” Read the full story…
USA Today: Lack of vitamin D rampant in infants, teens
Giving your children all they need to grow big and strong may not be as simple as a gummy vitamin and three square meals. They still may be susceptible to an epidemic that’s starting to gain the notice of pediatricians and bone doctors across the country: vitamin D deficiency. Mike Stone joined a growing legion of children diagnosed with the condition when an X-ray of his 14-year-old bones revealed a skeleton so thin it appeared clear on film. Read the full story…
Information Week: Today’s Teens: Breakin’ The Law, Breakin’ The Law
Kids these days, I tell ya. Turns out most teenagers could care less about the law when it comes to driving and cell phone use. In fact, a recent study shows that in North Carolina, teen use of cell phones while driving has increased since laws preventing it were enacted. How is it they are failing to get the message? Read the full story…
CBS News: Self-Cutting Linked To Risky Teen Sex
Teens who are frequent self-cutters are also more likely to engage in risky sexual behaviors and have a greater HIV risk than teens receiving psychiatric treatment who have cut just a few times, new research suggests. The findings identify habitual cutting behavior as an important risk factor for sexual risk, even in already high-risk teens, researcher Larry K. Brown, M.D., tells WebMD. In 2005, Brown and colleagues from the Bradley Hasbro Children’s Research Center in Providence, R.I., first reported the link between self-cutting and sexual risk taking in a study involving close to 300 teens undergoing intensive psychiatric treatment. Read the full story…
Minneapolis Star Tribune: Dads create clean Christian version of MySpace
About a year ago, Randall Brown started looking for a safe place for kids to hang out. Online, that is. He found out the hard way that MySpace isn’t just for finding friends, networking or listening to cool bands. Companies have hacked into MySpace and spam-slammed it with porn ads and other advertisements. He also looked at Facebook. Although that site has had better luck filtering out porn and ads, there are still teens being teens, posting comments, graphics and applications that might be offensive. Read the full story…
Teen Headlines: June 16, 2008
June 16, 2008 Combating Child Obesity: Helping Kids Feel Better by Doing What They Love
For many gamers of the 8-bit generation, this opening line was an introduction to their first experience of the quintessential “hero on a quest” role-playing game (RPG).
For the next few weeks of the player’s life, they would venture into dank, unlit dungeons and swamp-infested lands in search of treasure, a mythical Ball of Light, and the villainous Dragonlord.
Dragon Warrior completely immersed the player in a personal journey as they defeated hundreds of green slimes, upgraded magical weapons, and rescued a princess. Throughout all of this, the player witnessed their character physically growing in power.
As their avatar leveled up, many gamers would notice their virtual confidence rise in conjunction… but what did it do for their real world self-esteem?
When all was said and done and the mighty Dragonlord was defeated, the player would return to reality.
While their pixelated hero ran countless miles across countryside and engaged in hundreds of physical battles, the actual body of the gamer just spent dozens of hours doing thumb push-ups with their rear planted firmly to the couch.
It was during her oldest daughter’s first year in college that Betsy Fentress realized something had to change. It was becoming increasingly difficult to get in touch with her child by phone. “I found that she wouldn’t answer,” said Fentress, of University City. “She would text me back and say, ‘What’s up?’”
Ah, texting. That key to a young person’s heart. Or at least her brain. Today, Fentress thinks nothing of pecking out messages on her cell phone when she needs to get a message to her daughter, who just finished her sophomore year. And she sees little reason to think it will be any different with her other five children as they grow older.
Patrice Oppliger has three words to describe the trend of marketing makeup, sexy lingerie, and spa days for the prepubescent set: girls gone skank. It’s the title of the College of Communication assistant professor of communication’s new book, which explores what Oppliger calls the “self–sexual exploitation” of women.
MTV and SpinVox launch first ever voice powered social networking campaign.
MTV’s Staying Alive Foundation, SpinVox and Causes on Facebook yesterday announced the launch of their joint campaign, ‘Stand By What You Say’. The groundbreaking initiative encourages young people to speak openly about sex, sexual health and HIV/AIDS, with a view to increasing awareness and breaking down the stigma and discrimination which so often accompanies the disease.
The campaign uses SpinVox to convert the voice messages that people leave in to text. Those that speak up are then asked to bolster their support by pledging money to the Staying Alive Foundation, MTV’s HIV and AIDS charity which allocates grants to youth-led organizations who work to raise awareness on a local, grass-roots level. SpinVox itself will be ‘standing by what it says’ to match funds raised to the value of $50,000.
Teens Engage in Sexting
May 28, 2008
A funny picture or a flirty message on your phone may seem innocent enough, but what is your teen really saying when they send a text.
“Teenagers are having sex by the phone, sending flirty messages, meeting up to have sex,” says 16 year old Rochellie Garcia.
“On the one hand it can be kind of fun to get an erotic message over your email or on the phone,” says Certified Sex Therapist Joyce Joseph. “But on the other hand none of that is really safe or private.”
It’s known to teens as sexting, and though it doesn’t always lead to a physical act, Joseph says it can confuse teenagers emotionally.
USA Today: Japan seeks limits on kids' cellphone use
May 27, 2008
Japanese youngsters are getting so addicted to Internet-linking cellphones that the government is starting a program warning parents and schools to limit their use among children.
The government is worried about elementary and junior high school students getting sucked into cyberspace crimes, spending long hours exchanging mobile e-mails and suffering other negative effects of cellphone overuse, Masaharu Kuba, a government official overseeing the initiative, said Tuesday.
“Japanese parents are giving cellphones to their children without giving it enough thought,” he said. “In Japan, cellphones have become an expensive toy.”
The recommendations were submitted by an education reform panel to Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda’s administration and approved this week.
