friends. not strangers, not kids from a rival clique. their biggest source of pain is from those closest to them. 360 s other expert sociologist dr. robert faris calls all of this social combat. to play the popularity game effectively, i think some kids believe that they need to engage in some hardball, and i think they do things deliberately to make their rivals in particular, who are often their friends, feel pretty bad. those bad feelings, that humiliation which comes from bullying and social combat, is only intensified on social media where everyone is watching all the time. in fact, our study found that the line between the real world and the cyber world no longer exists for kids in middle school. you heard that right. the line between the real world and the cyber world no longer exists for kids in middle school. in fact, what happens online sometimes matters even more to
study to look at what kids actually say on social media and why it matters so much to them. designed by renowned child clinical psychologist marion underwood and dr. robert faris. teens answered survey questions like how often have you gotten into a conflict with someone on social media? have you posted something on social media you later regretted? what s the best thing that s happened to you on social media? how often do you worry you re missing out on what your friends are doing online? what our experts discovered might completely change what you think it s like being 13. the first headline, the more teens look at social media, the more distressed they can become. teens check their social media feeds way more than they actually post something. our experts call it lurking. and the heaviest users in this study told us they check their feeds more than 100 times a day.
middle schoolers is their friends. not strangers. not kids from a rival click. their biggest source of pain is from those closest to them. 360 s other expert dr. robert faris calls all of this social combat. to play the popularity game effectively, some kids believe they need to engage in some hard ball. and i think they do things deliberately to make their rivals in particular who are often their friends feel pretty bad. those bad feelings that humiliation which comes from bullying and social combat is only intensified on social media where everyone is watching all the time. in fact, our study found that the line between the real world and the cyberworld no longer exists for kids in middle school. you heard that right. the line between the real world and cyberworld no longer exists for kids in middle school. in fact, what happens online sometimes matters even more to them than what happens in real life. why? well, the simple answer is there
in th ground breaking cnn investigation is the first major study to look at what kids actually say on social media and why it matters so much to them, designed by renowned child clinical psychologist dr. marianne underwood and socialologist dr. robert faris, they answer questions like how often have you gotten into a conflict with someone on social media? have you posted something that you later regretted? what s the best thing that s happened to you on social media? how often the you worry that you re missing out on what your friends are doing online? what our experts discovered might completely change what you think it s like being 13. the more teams look at social media, the more distressed they can become. teens check their social media feeds way more than they actually post something. our experts called it lurking. and the heaviest users in this
from those closest to them. 360 s other expert dr. robert faris calls all of this social combat. to play the popularity game effectively, some kids believe they need to engage in some hard ball. and i think they do things deliberately to make their rivals in particular who are often their friends feel pretty bad. those bad feelings that humiliation which comes from bullying and social combat is only intensified on social media where everyone is watching all the time. in fact, our study found that the line between the real world and the cyberworld no longer exists for kids in middle school. you heard that right. the line between the real world and cyberworld no longer exists for kids in middle school. in fact, what happens online sometimes matters even more to them than what happens in real life. why? well, the simple answer is there are more witnesses. that s why our next topic is so