Adolescent Development Socialization And The Internet Essay

PAGES
3
WORDS
1070
Cite

Social Networks Adolescent Development, Socialization, and the Internet

Evaluate how social learning theory and strain theory could be used to explain adolescent development and behavior

Social learning theory suggests that adolescents learn from observing the behaviors of others, not simply in real life but also online. In fact, the mores and accepted behaviors for online interactions are often quite different from what is considered acceptable behavior offline. Teens may be emboldened by the anonymity conferred by an online avatar that enables them to hide their real names. Even if not anonymous, the distance between themselves and their online targets may encourage more meanness and cattiness than would ever take place in a face-to-face context.

As depicted in the Frontline documentary Growing Up Online, both adults and children will often not apply the same ethical standards to the behaviors in which they engage in online as they do to behaviors in the real world. It feels 'safe' to make a racist or offensive online comment, and somehow distanced from one's true self. The rules of behavior online seem more lax, as users can read the negative words of people all over the world, from a variety of backgrounds and can at least temporarily ignore the social norms they perceive exist within their immediate community.

However, another interesting aspect of the documentary was the degree to which it emerged that students do not necessarily see their online interactions as extraordinary or separate from their day-to-day interactions. For most teens past a certain age, being in constant online contact with friends is a way of life. Despite the...

...

They saw their online life as connected to their real life, not separate from it. And yet the ways in which they comported themselves in that online life were profoundly different, harsher, and more raw than real life behaviors. Their inability to see that what they did online could make someone feel bad or would have consequences beyond the screen suggests the cognitive distancing that is facilitated by the Internet, and the degree to which online social norms are set by teens, versus adults (in contrast to school and home).
As well as social learning theory, online interactions also manifest the principles of social strain theory. According to social strain theory, crimes are committed when individuals believe that current social venues do not enable them to pursue their goals and/or they believe that social inequalities are preventing them from advancing. On Facebook or Instagram, a teen can look into the life of someone else from a distance, and covet that person's existence. It may seem as if everyone is wealthier, happier, and leading a more exciting life, based upon the online evidence they present. This anger and resentment can cause some teens to lash out, either verbally or even physically. Of course, jealousy is hardly a new emotion, but the ability to edit and present a 'perfect' life on Facebook can raise the ire of many onlookers.

Strain theory also suggests that criminal behavior arises as a way of expressing anger when more legitimate venues are not offended. Teens who feel unable or unwilling to…

Sources Used in Documents:

References

What we learned. (2008). Growing up online. PBS. Retrieved:

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/kidsonline/etc./notebook.html

Young, K. (2009). Online social networking: An Australian perspective. International Journal of Emerging Technologies and Society, 7(1), 39-57.


Cite this Document:

"Adolescent Development Socialization And The Internet" (2013, April 18) Retrieved April 19, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/adolescent-development-socialization-and-101086

"Adolescent Development Socialization And The Internet" 18 April 2013. Web.19 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/adolescent-development-socialization-and-101086>

"Adolescent Development Socialization And The Internet", 18 April 2013, Accessed.19 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/adolescent-development-socialization-and-101086

Related Documents

Studying a sample of 153 top commercial Web sites directed at children under 13, the CME found that COPPA has spurred changes in Web sites' data collection practices. Web sites had limited the amount and type of information (e.g., name, postal address, phone number, age) collected from children, and there was a three-fold increase in the posting of privacy policy information explaining sites' data collection practices. A few sites

The key years during which experimentation occurs - between 13 and 16. Kobus discusses influences that launch an adolescent's smoking habit from several perspectives. First, the "social learning theory": relationships that are "more intimate" and that are developed "earlier in the youth's experiences" and thought to be more important; and youths are more likely to "imitate the smoking habits" (or non-smoking habits) of those with whom they have the closes

..social skills are built and educational choices are made that influence the entire adulthood" (90). Thus, the concern on the possible effects Internet addiction can have on the youth's development as an adult makes escalating Internet use and eventual addiction not just a concern, but must also be considered as a serious mental health problem that progresses through the user's formative years from adolescent to adult stages. It is in

You'd be able to hook up to the network through your computer, interactive TV, telephone, or some future device that somehow combines the attributes of all three. Even wireless gadgets such as pagers, future versions of cellular phones, and newfangled "personal digital assistants" would be able to tap into the highway. The purpose: to provide remote electronic banking, schooling, shopping, taxpaying, chatting, game playing, videoconferencing, movie ordering, medical diagnosing...

Childhood Education Proposal Location: Anywhere, America Family Childcare & Preschool Center Hours: 7am -- 7pm Ages Served: Infants, Toddlers & Preschoolers from 2 to 6 EcoCare is a complete family-supportive facility designed to build learning and growing resiliency into the children and parents we serve. Children who are resilient have self-control and self-regulation, which will allow them to learn and use learning skills as they move into a formal classroom setting. We believe this will

In the historical world, there seemed to be fewer choices in life for many, and roles as adults were more stringent -- and defined as adult meaning very structured cultural templates. There must then be a bit of a Catch-22 when it comes to the advances made in gender thinking, family, and actualization since the end of World War II. Improvements in education, lifting of the gender-based glass ceiling