"Totally Wired" Offers Parents Realistic View, Advice

Sat May 12, 2007 11:55PM EDT

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I caught up with Anastasia Goodstein, author of Totally Wired. If you're a parent looking for a reasoned, wide-angle view of teens, tech, and how they present themselves and communicate online and via cell phones, this book is required reading.

Goodstein has worked with teens, keeps daily track of marketing and media related to teens on her blog, YPulse, and has vivid memories of being a teen. She couples all that with the most up-to-date research and interviews with teens, parents, and educators in Totally Wired: What Teens and Tweens are Really Doing Online for one of the least alarming and realistic takes on today's teens and how they use technology.

Robin Raskin reviews Goodstein's book in this post, and I talked to her about some of the main takeaways she hopes parents reap from her work. The main one is that the stories that dominate the media about online predators making contact with teens via the net are far from the norm. She cites stats that violent crime in the U.S. has dropped 38 percent since 1975, and that out of 800,000 cases of kids reported missing every year, only 150 are kidnappings by strangers. Most teens, Goodstein writes, are like Sylvia, a teen she interviewed, who said: "I've never made a friend online who I've never met before. I would just feel too uncomfortable about it."

"Part of my message and the message of the book is it's not the technology per se," Goodstein says. "Teens are teens doing all of the things they have always done. Looking for validation. Figuring out who they are. And they're doing that by expressing themselves by how they decorate their profile pages, their buddy icons. They want to stay in touch with their friends just as they always have, but now they have a new set of digital tools to do that."

Those tools can be frightening to parents who are not familiar or comfortable with them. So another of Goodstein's messages to parents is to dive in and learn about them. Ask your kids to show you how to set up a profile, or choose an avatar to represent you online. As you widen the door to their online lives, then you can help them set boundaries. Help them figure out how to balance their time online with the rest of their lives, and make good judgments about what they say and the images they post online. "You don't have to know technology to explain how everything works," she says. "That's just being a parent."

Goodstein doesn't sugarcoat the negative of the painfully public side of teen expression: the cyberbullying that takes place, the forums for teens to support each other in destructive behavior, such as anorexia. But the more parents learn about what teens are doing online, the more we can help guide them through this very public world.

"It's such a big part of their lives now, online and offline," Goodstein says. "If they (parents) don't engage, they're missing out on a huge part of their kids' lives."

Good advice. And there's lots more, about 200 pages of it, in Totally Wired.

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  • 6 Posted by tangeles on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:55PM EDT Report Abuse

    Balance is the key, I would say. Expose the kids to both the old and the new ways. Technology and progress is inevitable and unstoppable. Know technology so you could discuss it with your kids. I was not born or educated in the computer age but am as comfortable in it as any teenager. I also like it that my daughter looks up to me for guidance on how to use the web and computers, unlike my other friends who are being taught by their kids. Knowledge is power!

  • 8 Posted by xr600dog on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:53PM EDT Report Abuse

    Only a great mind can read this This is weird, but interesting! fi yuo cna raed tihs, yuo hvae a sgtrane mnid too Cna yuo raed tihs? Olny 55 plepoe out of 100 can. i cdnuolt blveiee taht I cluod aulaclty uesdnatnrd waht I was rdanieg. The phaonmneal pweor of the hmuan mnid, aoccdrnig to a rscheearch at Cmabrigde Uinervtisy, it dseno't mtaetr in waht oerdr the ltteres in a wrod are, the olny iproamtnt tihng is taht the frsit and lsat ltteer be in the rghit pclae. The rset can be a taotl mses and you can sitll raed it whotuit a pboerlm. Tihs is bcuseae the huamn mnid deos not raed ervey lteter by istlef, but the wrod as a wlohe. Azanmig huh? yaeh and I awlyas tghuhot slpeling was ipmorantt! if you can raed tihs forwrad it Heh heh heh. Cool, huh? Easy for me to read. How 'bout you? Oh, and you can ignore the forwarding thing. My mother sent this to me in an email.

  • 9 Posted by tifffchow on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:08PM EDT Report Abuse

    I'm going to have to agree with many of you. I am an 18 year old female and I find myself spending more time texting and going online. Heck, I even have a sidekick which allows me to always be online even when I'm not at home. I'm not exactly sure why I enjoy being 'wired' but it seems as though it makes life easier to connect with others that I no longer get to see. Emails take way too long. Although some of you say that teens have no communication skills face to face, I will have to disagree with that. It depends on whether or not the person is social. Don't get me started about IPODS.. is it just me or does it seem disrespectful at a dinner table when your child is blocking all communication just so they can listen to their music? I have an IPOD but it is used only as a radio in times of need. As tangeles stated.. "balance is the key."

  • 10 Posted by dotheboo on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:47PM EDT Report Abuse

    Haha. That's funny, I thought the title was Totally Weird, but it's Totally Wired. I'm a teen and I agree that most kids' communication skills today are crap. It's especially annoying when they use l33t speak. What the heck is that? Between that kind of stuff, texting and IMing, no wonder people today don't know how to spell. Geeze. I prefer face to face. But honestly, look at the world we're living in. No one can say that it's not going downhill. The advances in technology have their pluses, but it's one of the biggest traps today. Supposedly no one can see what you're doing online or who you're talking to. So people just feel free to do whatever they want and think that it won't hurt them or anyone else. Wrong. I don't feel like typing anymore so... continue my thought process in your own head if you please. Adios, peeps. ~Me

  • 11 Posted by monkey_bizzare on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:25PM EDT Report Abuse

    I dont think there is anything wrong with us teens!! We just talk online cuz we need r fredum. parents dont let us do stuff that most teens do so what do we do to retaliate. go online and do the stuff for example. . you rarely see a teen that doesnt cuss wether its in front of their parents or behing their backs teens do it. Another example is having boyfriends/girlfriends in my dads year book for 6th grade he had won cutest couple i am going into eigth grade now and my dad wont let me have a boyfriend so how do teens retaliate the text love notes or call eachother late at night. We are so wired so that we can get freedom!

  • 12 Posted by ilovemyblueeyes on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:23PM EDT Report Abuse

    Exactally my parents arnt up to par on todays tecnology so they limit me to everything they only think about the worst

  • 13 Posted by bublepoper1214 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:15PM EDT Report Abuse

    well im a teen and im addicted to the computer and my cell phone... hehe

  • 14 Posted by monkey_bizzare on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:25PM EDT Report Abuse

    anf i agree with ilovemyblueeyes parents need to catch up on the latest technology! my dad doesnt even have a cell phone or know how to use one

  • 15 Posted by tessa_rae on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:01PM EDT Report Abuse

    I'm fourteen and I think this article does a little bit of justice for teens who are active online. People tend to think that the internet is just filled with predators watching their child's every move, but in reality, kids wouldn't be on the internet if it had no communication capabilities to their friends. Also, I'm a writer, so I like to get on forums to share my writing with others. I'm an artist as well, and I like to go to another forum to share my art. There's more to teens online than meets the eye.

  • 16 Posted by yellowduck24@sbcglobal.net on Thu Jul 26, 2007 12:41AM EDT Report Abuse

    Technology is making us lazy. I am 12 years old and it drives me CRAZY when I see teens obsessed with technology and IM-ing and Texting BLAH BLAH BLAH! It is a WASTE of time!

  • 17 Posted by mariannaexit132 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:06PM EDT Report Abuse

    MY GOD!!These are the future congress woman or man or even president and they can't even spell or communicate skillfully. Why do parents today give their teenager every new gadget that comes on the market??? Point them back to the skills of the three R'S!!!For those of you out there who can't remember or do not know what the three R'S represent (that is READING. wRITING and aRITHMETIC Mary Ann

  • 18 Posted by jkjk616 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:36PM EDT Report Abuse

    yyyyyyyyyyyyyyy EMAIL Create video emails that will impress everyone.

  • 19 Posted by northernwolf0000 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:41PM EDT Report Abuse

    Haha, think of it this way. Look back when to the times of when the television came to be. And when vehicles were made, the way people dressed in the 70's and 80's etc. That all would have been weird or blasphemis to the people back in the early 50's. It's just life and people are going to take it differently and there is not much we are going to change about it. People will just have to go with the flow and accept things the way they are.

  • 20 Posted by bluehotblaze on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:09PM EDT Report Abuse

    as long as your smart about it, there is no need to worry

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