Tips for Predators?

WhiteBear

Jedi Master
Not sure where this belongs in the forum, mods please help.

Sex, drugs more common in hyper-texting teens
MIKE STOBBE
From Associated Press
November 09, 2010 4:03 AM EST

ATLANTA (AP) — Teens who text 120 times a day or more — and there seems to be a lot of them — are more likely to have had sex or used alcohol and drugs than kids who don't send as many messages, according to provocative new research.

The study's authors aren't suggesting that "hyper-texting" leads to sex, drinking or drugs, but say it's startling to see an apparent link between excessive messaging and that kind of risky behavior.

The study concludes that a significant number of teens are very susceptible to peer pressure and also have permissive or absent parents, said Dr. Scott Frank, the study's lead author.

"If parents are monitoring their kids' texting and social networking, they're probably monitoring other activities as well," said Frank, an associate professor of epidemiology and biostatistics at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine.

Frank was scheduled to present the study Tuesday at a meeting of the American Public Health Association in Denver.

The study was done at 20 public high schools in the Cleveland area last year, and is based on confidential paper surveys of more than 4,200 students.

It found that about one in five students were hyper-texters and about one in nine are hyper-networkers — those who spend three or more hours a day on Facebook and other social networking websites.

About one in 25 fall into both categories.

Hyper-texting and hyper-networking were more common among girls, minorities, kids whose parents have less education and students from a single-mother household, the study found.

Frank's study is billed as one of the first studies to look at texting and social networking and whether they are linked to actual sexual intercourse or to other risky behaviors.

"This study demonstrates that it's a legitimate question to explore," said Douglas Gentile, who runs the Media Research Lab at Iowa State University.

The study found those who text at least 120 times a day are nearly three-and-a-half times more likely to have had sex than their peers who don't text that much. Hyper-texters were also more likely to have been in a physical fight, binge drink, use illegal drugs or take medication without a prescription.

Compared to the heavy texters, the hyper-networkers were not as likely to have had sex, but more likely to have been involved in other risky behaviors like drinking or fighting.

A Kaiser Family Foundation study found that about half of children ages 8 to 18 send text messages on a cell phone in a typical day. The texters estimated they average 118 texts per day. That study also found that only 14 percent of kids said their parents set rules limiting texting.

Other studies have tied teen texting to risky or lewd behavior. A Pew Research Center study found that about one-third of 16- and 17-year-olds send texts while driving. And an Associated Press-MTV poll found that about one-quarter of teenagers have "sexted" — shared sexually explicit photos, videos and chat by cell phone or online.

The latest survey did not ask what students texted or what they discussed on social networks.

One suburban Cleveland student said her texts involve non-sexual small talk with friends, homework assignments and student council bake sales.

"I text with my mother about what time I need picked up," said Tiara Freeman-Sargeant, a 14-year-old Shaker Heights High School freshman. She said she sends and receives about 250 texts a day.

Talking on the phone just isn't appealing to some teens, said her classmate, Ivanna Storms-Thompson.

"Your arm gets tired, your ear gets sweaty," said Ivanna, who also doesn't like the awkward silences.

Like her friend, Ivanna said she mostly gets A's. Whether kids who text do well in school or behave in a crazy, risky way is coincidental, she said.

"It depends on who you're talking to and whether they have their priorities straight," she said.

___

Online:

Conference: http://www.apha.org/meetings/

This article does not strike me as being a warning for parents, even though it -does- mention parenting, and the likeliness that if parents are monitoring social networking, that they're monitoring other activities as well...it strikes me more as a tip-off to predators who may not be fully aware of the availability of young people to have sex with and where to get drugs.

I need a mirror, please...is this visible to you guys, or is this more likely hitting a program of mine? I'm very confused about this one.
 
WhiteBear said:
...is this visible to you guys,

Yes, it is now since you've mentioned it. However I think there is no reason for your concern because it's only a study showing the connection between two apparently unrelated things with no indication why.
 
WhiteBear said:
Not sure where this belongs in the forum, mods please help.

This article does not strike me as being a warning for parents, even though it -does- mention parenting, and the likeliness that if parents are monitoring social networking, that they're monitoring other activities as well...it strikes me more as a tip-off to predators who may not be fully aware of the availability of young people to have sex with and where to get drugs.

I need a mirror, please...is this visible to you guys, or is this more likely hitting a program of mine? I'm very confused about this one.

Speaking of monitoring teens social networks, I heard an advertisement for a company that will do background searches on all your teens' FB Friends. :shock:

As far as the article you reference, it sounds like more of a warning for parents since most predators already know how to stalk online.
 
WhiteBear said:
Talking on the phone just isn't appealing to some teens, said her classmate, Ivanna Storms-Thompson.

"Your arm gets tired, your ear gets sweaty," said Ivanna, who also doesn't like the awkward silences.

Like her friend, Ivanna said she mostly gets A's. Whether kids who text do well in school or behave in a crazy, risky way is coincidental, she said.

"It depends on who you're talking to and whether they have their priorities straight," she said.

I amazes me that talking on the phone has already become old fashioned. I wonder if this current generation is going to have the necessary social skills to converse with one another in a meaningful manner? It doesn't help that there are few role models on tv these days that exemplify the model of polite, meaningful conversation. Conversations via text message are extremely shallow for the most part.

Kids who are hyper-texting are seeking attention and approval and trying to show their parents that they can be little-adults. They obviously aren't getting attention at home from their parents or other family members if they have to resort to 3hrs of social networking time and 200+ text messages per day. That's probably where the other risky behavior comes into the picture too. They're trying to prove that they can act like adults, but in the most vile of ways.

I saw the article as a warning to parents, although it doesn't address how parents should properly act towards their children. I think parents assume that after the child becomes a teen, their job is done and they can go back to work and get on with their lives. Nothing could be further from the truth though.
 
Thank you, I just realized why this was bugging me. Last night on FB, a mother posted up a picture of her missing 16 year old daughter to be cross-posted as widely as possible. I checked her out, to see if it was a scam of some sort, and it appeared to be authentic, but in the process of checking I found the girl also had a MySpace page on which she professed to be 18.

I assumed the mother had no knowledge of this site because of the age posted, so I sent her a message telling her I was going to cross-post the information, but that her daughter also had this other MySpace page on which she said she was 18, and she should check the MySpace network for chatter about her whereabouts.

I'm certain, now, that this was in the back of my mind while I read the above article this morning...and why it disturbed me so much about the possibility of predation.
 

Trending content

Back
Top Bottom