a generation of mobile junkies

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for a FILM_260 project at Queen's University

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A Generation of Mobile Junkies

By Garrett Kerkkamp

Photo by rick (Flickr)

Teens are just as likely to have a cell phone as they are to have a desktop or laptop computer. And increasingly these phones are affording teens

always-on, mobile access to the internet

Photo by Daweed (Flickr)

37% of American youth ages 12-17 now have a smartphone, up from 23% in 2011

Photo by Phil Roeder (Flickr)

One in four young people say

they are "cell-mostly" Internet users

Photo by Garry Knight (Flickr)

A 2012 University of Washington study noted that teens in general considered their

rather high level of connectivity as necessary for effective cultural development

and to prevent social isolation… 

Photo by Michael Heiss (Flickr)

…Some participants considered the

ability to connect anytime and anywhere with their friends to be not just convenient, but necessary to

stay up-to-date

Photo by Michael Mandiberg (Flickr)

“There has already been a ‘drastic drop’ in the number of teens getting  driver's licenses, likely

due to their adoption of mobile technology and social media.” - Brian S Hall

Photo by “from the field” (Flickr)

Researchers have found

that constantly checking for messages is

an addiction which like

other drugs can ruin your personal relationships.

Photo by Keoni Cabral (Flickr)

“It can become a compulsion and others feel

feelings of withdrawal when they are not with their phone.” – Richard Alleyne

Photo by Muhammad Fawwaz Ai'zat Sa'ari (Flickr)

"They are not just a consumer tool, but are used as a status symbol.”- Dr. James Robert’s

Photo by FurLined (Flickr)

Studies have

revealed young adults, aged 18 to 29, send on average

109.5 texts a day.

Photo by Miles Metcalfe (Flickr)

Researchers say a majority of youngsters claim losing their phone would be

"disastrous to their social lives".

Photo by Eric Constantineau (Flickr)

“Students checking Facebook in class

is so commonplace that the school’s professors don’t care” - Hemi H. Gandhi

Photo by Chris Messina (Flickr)

According to a new global

study students are all addicted to media… 

Photo by WebTreatsETC (DeviantArt)

…Researchers asked 1,000 students at a dozen universities in ten countries on five continents to

abstain from any kind of media consumption for 24 hours. A majority confessed that

they actually couldn't complete the challenge. 

Photo by jayneandd (Flickr)

"The occasional day

where my phone isn't charged or I

leave it behind, it feels almost as though

I'm naked in public." - Michael Weller

Photo by Eric Mesa (Flickr)

"I've had

students tell me that they bring their cell phones

in the shower with them.

They sleep with them." - Stephen Groening

Photo by JovanCormac (Flickr)

“I don't think the

technology itself is

bad. The benefits

vastly outweigh the

risks” - Daniel Castro

Photo by Jon Sullivan (Under Public Domain)

All Images used in this presentation Flipbook are under the Non-Commercial creative commons Share

Alike 3.0 license

References And Interesting Articles

Brian S Hall; April 8th, 2013; “Teenagers & Smartphones: How They're Already Changing The World”; http://readwrite.com/2013/04/08/teenagers-smartphones-how-theyre-changing-the-world

Katie Davis. Friendship 2.0: Adolescents' experiences of belonging and self-disclosure online. Journal of Adolescence, 2012; DOI: 10.1016/j.adolescence.2012.02.013

Richard Alleyne;30 Nov 2012; “Mobile phone addiction ruining relationships”; http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/news/9714616/Mobile-phone-addiction-ruining-relationships.html

November 8, 2012 “Professor Uses Student Snitches to Ban Facebook in Class” http://www.good.is/posts/professor-uses-student-snitches-to-ban-facebook-in-class/

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