Showing posts with label generation gap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label generation gap. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 12, 2025

Interesting study: "Young people say they increasingly struggle to make plans and follow through on them"


"Young adults’ personalities are changing, with conscientiousness — being responsible, organized, hard-working and goal-oriented — in freefall.

New data in @financialtimes this week points to what I’ve been calling #theattentionapocalypse. These are young people’s self-assessments, not anyone speaking on their behalf.

Young people say they increasingly struggle to make plans and follow through on them. They feel distracted, careless. They feel less outgoing and talkative. They feel less helpful and trusting, and more argumentative.

#Conscientiousness and #neutoriticism as personality traits are highly predictive of career success, divorce and mortality. Highly conscientious people (reliable, disciplined) have the best life outcomes. They live the longest and succeed at work. Their relationships last.

This report is astonishing, and it mirrors my research in #theanxiousgeneration. #GenZ is different, in ways we as a society must work to change. This includes everything from #thefournorms I propose in the book (delaying smartphones & social media, #phonefreeschools, and more IRL, embodied experiences) to better infrastructure to support in-person activities for all ages.

Since infrastructure takes years, if not decades, to change, the best place to start is our own homes. Limit your own social media and screen time. Try *not* to fill interstitial moments with screens. Resist the endless scroll. Most of all, if you have kids, limit touch-screen devices and insist on reading, real-life unstructured play, longer stories (family movies are fine on non-touch-screen devices), and other activities that foster slow dopamine.

Join the other parents and organizations committed to this work at anxiousgeneration.com/join. Let’s do this, together."

Additional charts from the study can be found ->

Monday, November 12, 2007

Senior Center: path to Oak St/Horace Mann



One of the better things I noticed about the new Senior Center, is that the fence previously dividing the property from the next door Oak Street Elementary, Horance Mann Middle and the Early Childhood Development Center School complex was taken down and enhanced with a path way.

A bridge for the generation gap!

Two critical populations for Franklin now have a way to connect. Let's encourage both the seniors and the schools to make good use of this path.