A new survey confirms what most middle and high school teachers already know: A significant chunk of teenagers spend an unhealthy amount of time watching YouTube or scrolling through TikTok.
More than one in six teenagers say they are on TikTok鈥which is among the fastest-growing social media platforms鈥斺渁lmost constantly,鈥 while nearly one in five say the same about YouTube, according to The report was based on a survey of more than 1,300 teens ages 13 to 17, conducted last spring.
What鈥檚 more, over one in three teens surveyed鈥35 percent鈥攕ay they鈥檙e on at least one of five platforms 鈥渁lmost constantly,鈥 including Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok, and YouTube.
Overall, more teens find themselves spending most of their time online these days than just a few years ago. Almost half of teenagers surveyed鈥46 percent鈥攕ay they are online 鈥渁lmost constantly,鈥 or roughly double the number who said the same when the Center conducted a similar survey in 2015.
Teens are clearly 鈥渉ighly digitally connected,鈥 said Emily Vogels, a research associate at the Pew Research Center and a lead author of the report.
But, in focus groups conducted prior to the survey, she learned that teens are also 鈥渢rying to find the best way to interact with these spaces. They鈥檙e thinking critically,鈥 she explained, saying things like, 鈥溾業鈥檓 only going to interact with these people because I know who they are.鈥欌
Teens are mixed on whether or not it would be easy to ditch social media entirely. More than half of teens in the United States鈥54 percent鈥攕ay it would be at least somewhat hard for them to quit social media, with almost one in five saying it would be 鈥渧ery hard,鈥 according to the survey.
On the other hand, nearly half of teens say it would be at least somewhat easy for them to give up social media, with roughly a fifth reporting that would be very easy.
Teachers have a role to play in helping students understand the impact of social media on their behavior, attention spans, and even brain development, said Mary Beth Hertz, who will resume her previous role as a teacher at the Science Leadership Academy at Beeber in Philadelphia this fall.
Hertz is a fan of tech in the classroom, but if she sees a student mindlessly scrolling through a phone, she鈥檒l ask them, 鈥溾楢re you letting the technology win right now, or are you winning right now?鈥欌 She鈥檚 asked students to consider whether social media companies are being held accountable for the addictive behaviors their technologies are encouraging.
Teens are spending a lot less time on Facebook
YouTube is the most popular social media platform among teens, according to the survey, with 95 percent of respondents saying they鈥檝e been on the video-sharing site at some point. About two thirds have used TikTok, while six in ten teenagers say the same about Instagram and Snapchat.
At the same time, teens鈥 Facebook engagement nosedived from nearly three quarters of teens saying they鈥檝e used the platform at some point back in 2014-15 to just under a third this year.
That data serves as a reminder to educators that social media is 鈥渁n ever-changing and evolving landscape,鈥 Vogels said. 鈥淲here [teens are] flocking together to interact at any given point in time can very much shift and change.鈥
Black and Hispanic students are online more than their white peers
There are demographic differences when it comes to social media use. Teenage boys are more likely than girls to use YouTube, a video platform; Reddit, an online discussion forum, and Twitch, which focuses on videogame streaming. Girls, meanwhile, are more likely to hang out on Instagram, Snapchat, and TikTok.
Higher shares of Black and Hispanic teens report using Instagram, TikTok, Twitter, and WhatsApp, compared with white teens. And a slightly larger share of teens from households making $30,000 to $74,999 annually鈥51 percent鈥攗se the internet almost constantly, compared with 43 percent of teens with family incomes of at least $75,000 a year.
The findings about race and family income are particularly important for teachers to keep in mind when they are thinking about how to address teen social media use, or even incorporate the platforms into their classrooms, said Supreet Mann, a research manager at Common Sense Media, a nonprofit organization that examines the impact of technology on young people.
鈥淲e can鈥檛 put all of these kids into a bucket or think that by solving problems鈥 related to social media use for 鈥渉igher income or white kids that we鈥檙e going to be able to address the unique needs of minority or lower income kids,鈥 said Mann, who noted Pew鈥檚 findings dovetail closely with those in a recent .