Children Are Lonelier Than Ever. Can Anything Be Done?
Ancalagon 2021-08-17 22:42:56 +0000 UTC [ - ]
browningstreet 2021-08-18 04:42:29 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I spend my time between the US west coast and certain cities in Europe. I don’t think Americans, as a whole, know how to hang out and talk the way Europeans do. Part of it is our cities… there aren’t real public spaces. Everything’s commercial, or a development. Making plans to meet people involves a singular destination.
In Europe I’ll meet friends out, and we’ll have other friends catch up with us over the coarse of an evening, and we’ll move from a cafe to a square to a park, and we’ll have been chatting and it’ll suddenly be 4am. In America it’s very hard to get people to commit to a thing, and that’s usually dinner or a bar.
Ancalagon 2021-08-18 05:21:05 +0000 UTC [ - ]
ozfive 2021-08-18 03:46:03 +0000 UTC [ - ]
FooBarBizBazz 2021-08-17 23:22:02 +0000 UTC [ - ]
kar5pt 2021-08-19 01:00:21 +0000 UTC [ - ]
criticaltinker 2021-08-17 21:27:58 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Unfortunately the OP suggested very little in terms of "what can be done", beyond the classic "reduce screen time" recommendation.
Excerpts from [1]:
> The Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) survey of 15- and 16-year-old students around the world included a 6-item measure of school loneliness in 2000, 2003, 2012, 2015, and 2018 (n = 1,049,784, 51% female) across 37 countries.
> School loneliness increased 2012–2018 in 36 out of 37 countries. Worldwide, nearly twice as many adolescents in 2018 (vs. 2012) had elevated levels of school loneliness. Increases in loneliness were larger among girls than among boys and in countries with full measurement invariance. In multi-level modeling analyses, school loneliness was high when smartphone access and internet use were high.
> School loneliness was positively correlated with negative affect and negatively correlated with positive affect and life satisfaction, suggesting the measure has broad implications for adolescent well-being.
> The psychological well-being of adolescents around the world began to decline after 2012, in conjunction with the rise of smartphone access and increased internet use, though causation cannot be proven and more years of data will provide a more complete picture.
[1] Worldwide increases in adolescent loneliness https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S014019712...
musicale 2021-08-18 06:51:45 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Wehner 2021-08-18 04:44:00 +0000 UTC [ - ]
oogabooga123 2021-08-17 20:44:13 +0000 UTC [ - ]
jazzyjackson 2021-08-17 21:28:47 +0000 UTC [ - ]
BadCookie 2021-08-17 21:47:52 +0000 UTC [ - ]
cbozeman 2021-08-17 21:57:31 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Yeah, something can be done. What was done to me as a kid in the 80s and 90s. Kick them out of the house. Tell them to go outside and play with their friends. Stop helicopter parenting them every second of the day, and stop trying to fill their entire waking lives with "enrichment" activities in a bid to get them into an Ivy League school.
I work with a young woman who went to Princeton and is a Robotics Deployment Engineer for Amazon, a job you could get having gone to a state cow college. How do I know this? I work for the company that's working with Amazon to deploy their robots. And I went to a state cow college. One of my colleagues didn't even go to college, he picked everything up on his own working at Amazon for two years and watching YouTube videos and reading books.
Leave these damn kids alone, take away their damn phones. Let them go outside. Let them get into trouble. Let them walk to the nearest city ballpark and play Home Run Derby like I did, at age 11. I would walk half a mile to my best friend's house, then we'd go walk to our friend's house a mile down the road, over and over, until we had 6-8 of us in a group, then we'd go do stuff.
We turned out fine. So will they.
kiba 2021-08-17 22:23:22 +0000 UTC [ - ]
If your friend lives in the same neighborhood, it's doable. If your friend lives in a neighborhood across the street, it's kinda doable.
However, cars are traveling at the speed up to 40 mph. Can be very dangerous if you're not cautious.
I remembered when I was a kid that I nearly died attempting to cross a street and got pulled back by my sister.
Hard to free range when everything is hostile to bicycles or walking.
jimmygrapes 2021-08-17 22:36:39 +0000 UTC [ - ]
FooBarBizBazz 2021-08-17 23:02:11 +0000 UTC [ - ]
Aerroon 2021-08-17 23:29:00 +0000 UTC [ - ]
I think kids can navigate around more safely than lots of people give them credit for. Although, American suburbia does look a little more hostile.
Barrin92 2021-08-18 03:43:47 +0000 UTC [ - ]
danudey 2021-08-18 20:39:34 +0000 UTC [ - ]
It's kind of ridiculous.
bitwize 2021-08-18 06:19:25 +0000 UTC [ - ]
But, you know, this is Hackernews, cars were always evil, and we have always been at war with Suburbia.
draygonia 2021-08-17 22:09:54 +0000 UTC [ - ]
llampx 2021-08-17 22:24:53 +0000 UTC [ - ]
kar5pt 2021-08-19 01:05:17 +0000 UTC [ - ]
cbozeman 2021-08-19 02:47:02 +0000 UTC [ - ]
danudey 2021-08-18 20:36:11 +0000 UTC [ - ]
https://reason.com/2015/06/11/11-year-old-boy-played-in-his-...
Oh, but the parents weren't home that time, okay. Even though I was walking home from school or to my grandmother's house well before I turned 11.
Okay, well, just send them into the back yard to play, where they'll be safe and you can watch them from the window, and then CPS will investigate you and, even though it's ridiculous, you'll now have a complaint on file forever.
https://www.scarymommy.com/mom-child-services-investigation-...
Believe it or not, I don't want to helicopter parent my kid; he'll wander off on the playground, and if I need to see him I'll go look for him; otherwise he'll come find me, eventually. Still, the reality is that I can't actually let him out of my sight, not for his own safety but for the risk of some fucking Karen calling the police because I'm not holding his hands every goddamn minute.
So please don't go around telling people to act like you did when you were a kid, because I did the same thing too and I loved it, and now there's a pretty solid chance that that kind of behaviour would risk my kid getting taken away. Even if the chances of them going through with it were slim, my family doesn't need that kind of stress and bullshit and constant random checkups and more restrictions than ever.
Hell, my kid has known how to take the bus since he was three years old, but hey, even though it's statistically safer than driving I might still end up spending three years and $70,000 to convince some unaccountable government-appointed body that yes, my kids are safer taking the bus than anything else.
https://5kids1condo.com/we-won-common-sense-prevails-in-bus-...
Note: Here in Vancouver, we don't have school buses because we have such a great transit system, but kids aren't allowed to take it anyway so we still have to spend an hour or more out of our days every morning and in the middle of the afternoon to take kids to school. That's a huge problem when you're job hunting and you have to say "Oh but I won't be able to start work until 10 because there's no other way to get my kid to school than taking him myself or fighting for a spot at before/after school care with a 160-kid waitlist."
So yeah, you're not wrong, except that your advice is purely asinine in our ridiculous world of neighbours calling the police on kids instead of keeping an eye on them. Please think about things before you speak up.