(cont'd from yesterday's post)
All that unsupervised play that children did decades ago actually built some important skills into their lives, like risk-taking and independent decision making and problem solving.
The amount of time that kids daily spend with friends is sharply down from twenty years ago (US Bureau of Labor Statistics). It was replaced with screen time, of course.
Instant gratification grows from screen time, but not self-control or independence or self-reliance or people skills. Generation Z seem to have more social stressors on them today, coupled with fewer strengths and learned virtues to handle them.
Anxiety, depression, loneliness are more common to this generation than to previous ones. Yesterday's author, Jonathan Haidt, put his explanation in his book.
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