Amazon Prime Day - 48 Hour Flash Sale - Up To 50% Off (Sale Includes All New Releases)

0

Hours

0

Minutes

0

Seconds
logo

Parenting Relationships

By Self Publishing Titans
The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness

The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness

by Jonathan Haidt

4.7 (3254 ratings)
Parenting Relationships

Published

Not found

Pages

Not found

Language

English

Publisher

Penguin Audio

Available Formats & Prices

View on Amazon

Kindle

$15.99

Paperback

$24.92

Audiobook

$17.72

Audio CD

Not found

About This Book

Introduction

**** In a world where digital devices are synonymous with childhood, The Anxious Generation delves into the psyche of today’s youth, exploring the unseen ramifications of a digitally rewired upbringing. As screens become an omnipresent part of life, the effects on mental wellness are profound, yet underexplored. This insightful book sheds light on the unrelenting pressures of modern childhood and the growing epidemic of mental illness threatening to engulf an entire generation.

By piecing together scientific studies, personal narratives, and expert opinions, the author paints a compelling picture of a problem that demands urgent attention.

Key Takeaways

**** Early digital exposure severely impacts emotional development and coping skills. Parental engagement and balanced tech use can mitigate mental health risks. Proactive solutions and awareness are crucial to reverse current trends.

Detailed Description

**** \nThe Anxious Generation takes readers on an eye-opening journey into the digital landscape that shapes today’s childhood experience. This book explores the intricate ways in which smartphones tablets and constant connectivity disrupt traditional developmental milestones culminating in an unprecedented epidemic of anxiety and depression among youth. With keen insight the author scrutinizes the cultural shift towards instant gratification and perpetual online interaction as contributing factors to this crisis.

By weaving together personal narratives from affected families and compelling data from mental health experts the book vividly illustrates the psychological turmoil faced by children today. While focusing on the gravity of the situation the book is not devoid of hope; it offers proactive strategies for parents educators and policymakers highlighting the importance of setting healthy boundaries and promoting a balanced approach to technology use. Readers will find a roadmap to fostering resilience and emotional well-being in the digital age understanding that empowered action is necessary to safeguard mental health for future generations.

By addressing these urgent concerns the book sets the stage for meaningful dialogue and community-driven solutions to create a supportive environment for youth.

Standout Features

**** \nThe Anxious Generation excels in combining empirical research with real-life stories offering a balanced perspective that resonates with both scientific and personal depths Its attention to meticulously curated data provides a foundation rich with factual evidence while drawing emotional connections through intimate narratives shared by affected families. Furthermore the book doesn’t merely diagnose the problem but advises with actionable solutions serving as a comprehensive guide for those seeking to navigate and mitigate the challenges presented by the digital age.

Book Details

ISBN-10:

Not found

ISBN-13:

Not found

Dimensions:

Not found

Weight:

Not found

Specifications

Pages:Not found
Language:English
Published:Not found
Publisher:Penguin Audio
Authors:Jonathan Haidt

Rating

4.7

Based on 3254 ratings

Customer Reviews

Urgently and passionately written

Verified Purchase
Xuan
September 4, 2024

This book is urgently and passionately written and argued, and supported with many facts and figures, all of which point to technological proliferation with smartphones + social media leading to teens’ mental health crisis. The author theorizes this is because it goes against the grain of our biological programming, and I agree with his argument, having experienced in my own life, and seeing how re-introducing community, ritual, free play, and time in nature to have profoundly positive effects on screen-addled children. As new technologies pull us further and further into the realm of science fiction, we should strive to find and nurture the precious things that root us in our earthly existence.

Impressive, Valuable, If Somewhat Repetitive

Verified Purchase
Robert H.
July 25, 2024

At breakfast with a member of our local Board of Ed, I asked what is behind the growth industry of psychologists, psychiatrists, and counselors in our (and all) school districts. I asked why we unquestioningly welcome the increase in the number of troubled students and wanted to know the root cause of all this malaise. He replied "Social media on mobile phones." Then he told me about this book. Haidt appears to be at the cutting edge of diagnosing the social, emotional, and physical effects of social media. Right up front, he outlines the topics he will tackle in this book and how he will propose to help solve the problems. And he does: His book is full of data and is perfectly convincing. My observation is that he could achieve all his goals more effectively with less repetition, side dalliances, and bloat. One gets the message much sooner and more often than the book demands. Still! If you recall the big move to delay school start times in the morning because the data supported the benefits, you should make an appointment with the Superintendent, as I have, to ask what they intend to do about the damage caused by the carpet bombing of developing minds by empty - and emptying - social media.

The devastation is real but it can be changed

Verified Purchase
Fred Provencher
July 24, 2024

This is an important book for anyone who cares about youth, about culture, about media, about the direction of our nation or the future success of our students. In short this is an important book for just about everyone. Jonathan Haidt is professor in the school of business at NYU with a PhD in social psychology from UPenn. His argument is based on peer reviewed academic research but it is accessible for anyone and is meant for parents, educators, politicians and business leaders. His argument is deductive -- he tells you in the first chapter what he has concluded and how he is going to explain it, then he does just that. His thesis is that the explosion of social media applications and the availability of them 24/7 through the smart phone has been a disaster for pre-teens and adolescents and is a direct cause of significant rise in mental health issues that every one sees. His chapters support this thesis with studies and anecdotes. I found it very persuasive because he gives voice to something we have all suspected. Social media hijacks our attention, fragments our thinking and causes us to withdraw from real embodied interaction with other people. This is harmful for everyone but it is devastating for young people whose brains and coping skills are still developing. In short we have over supervised our kids in the real world, fearing threats that are statistically very low and we have under supervised our children online where the threats are all too real. I cannot encourage you enough to read this book.

Crucial!

Verified Purchase
Michael Philliber
June 7, 2024

There is this creeping feeling that things are amiss, which keeps snagging our perceptions and catching on our minds. Some people shift the blame to this or that political party to explain the trouble or fault the stupidity and lameness of “those younger folk”. Most of the time much of the blame and assertions are prejudicial anecdotes with very little research or factual analysis. That’s where Jonathan Haidt comes in. Haidt is the Thomas Cooley Professor of Ethical Leadership at New York University’s Stern School of Business. He is also the author of several valuable works and papers, such as “The Righteous Mind” and “The Coddling of the American Mind” and other compositions. In March of 2024 he published “The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness”. This 400-page hardback, along with the supporting website at anxiousgeneration.com, give thoughtful, concerned readers a ton of factual research and analysis that diagnose what’s ailing us, but it also maps out practical ways “to reclaim human life for human beings in all generations” (17). Haidt carefully walks readers through numerous studies to show that there has been a multi-decade trend in American society (and the West) that has rewritten childhood, and the consequences are showing up with alarming frequency among those in the teens and twenty. He calls this trend the “Great Rewiring.” As he notes, the “most intense period of this rewiring was 2010 to 2015, although the story I will tell begins with the rise of fearful and overprotective parenting in the 1980s and continues through the COVID pandemic to the present day” (4). In a nutshell, the author shows how two trends have brought our teens and twenties to be an anxious generation: (1) overprotective parenting that removed kids from play-based childhood and brought them into (2) phone-based childhood. This is a childhood shaped early by easy, unprotected access to social media and the internet. “My central claim in this book is that these two trends – overprotection in the real world and underprotection in the virtual world – are the major reasons why children born after 1995 became the anxious generation” (9). That is the book in summary, and every chapter makes his case over and over again. In regard to overprotective parenting in the real world I can personally testify. The social pressure to protect our kids pushed us to restrain their independence as the grew up, because we were told repeatedly that there were sexual predators under every bush and around every corner. And then the increasing expectation was that no sensible parent would leave their eight-year-old child alone or allow their eleven-year-old to walk to the local grocery store, and more. “We shouldn’t blame parents for “helicoptering.” We should blame – and change – a culture that tells parents that they must helicopter.” This created, and still creates, an environment where “independence milestones” disappear “under a mountain of media-fueled fear” (254). Then, concerning the underprotective parenting in the virtual world, Haidt states that when “we gave our children and adolescents smartphones in the early 2010s, we gave companies the ability to apply variable-ratio reinforcement schedules all day long, training them like rats during their most sensitive years of brain rewiring. Those companies developed addictive apps that sculpted some very deep pathways in our children’s brains” (136). The majority of the book’s chapters work through this underprotection in the virtual world, and how it is fomenting emotional and mental troubles for our young adults, as well as many older adults. But the author is not like so many other writers and thinkers who only tell us what’s wrong. He weaves into his volume remedial aspects, and then takes four concluding chapters to speak to parents, teachers and administrators, governments, and tech companies. Not only are his suggestions helpful and practical, but they also seem to me to be common sense. As a Christian minister, his points and suggested solutions have stirred me think about how our congregation can be part of the cure for girls and boys, younger men and women. For example, Haidt – who is not a Christian – recommends families and communities take a “digital Sabbath” (204). Similarly, he applauds the value of communal rituals, social practices where people move together and “enter the realm of the sacred together, at the same time.” And that as this happens then as communities “engage in these practices together, and especially when they move together in synchrony, they increase cohesion and trust, which means they also reduce anomie and loneliness” (202-203). There is so much more, but one of the crucial ideas is to recognize, for us and our teens and twenties, that often social media platforms do not foster forgiveness, patience, slowness to anger, readiness to forgive. Instead, “Social media trains people to do the opposite: Judge quickly and publicly, lest ye be judged for not judging whoever it is we are all condemning today. Don’t forgive, or your team will attack you as a traitor” (211). “The Anxious Generation” is a must-read for parents, grandparents, educators, clergy, church elders, government officials, and whoever really cares about what is going on, and how to help bring healthiness into our world. I wholeheartedly recommend this volume!