
The Internet: More Popular than God?
The average teen is probably spending more time on the Internet each
week than participating in religious activities.
Article appeared in the
According
to researchers with the National Study of Youth and Religion, the vast majority
of
Among teens surveyed, religious teens seem to have broader access to the
Internet than non-religious teens, although these are most certainly more
social class than religious differences. Those who self-identified as Jewish or
mainline Protestant had the highest percentage of Internet access at 92 and 91
percent, respectively. Black Protestant teens have less access to the Internet
than the national average of all teens (62 percent compared to 80 percent).
Catholic teens were identical to the national average (80 percent). Among
non-religious teens, 73 percent reported Internet access. These findings come
from the NSYR survey data of 3,290 teens who, along with one of their parents,
participated in the random-digit-dial telephone study of
In other findings, only 60 percent of parents closely monitor teens' internet
activity. Among
teens
with Internet access, Latter Day Saints reported the most parental monitoring
(83 percent of Mormon teens surveyed said that their parents always or usually
monitored their use of the Internet, compared to 61 percent of all teens). LDS
teens also reported the fewest hours spent surfing the web (3.5 hours per week,
compared to the national average of 6.9 hours per week for all teens). Jewish
teens reported the least parental monitoring (48 percent). They also spend an
average of 7.1 hours per week using the Internet.
"It is interesting to see that non-religious teens have relatively low
access to the Internet and parental monitoring yet, for those with access, the highest
average time spent on the Internet of all the groups compared," stated Dr.
Christian Smith. Smith, the Stuart Chapin Distinguished Professor and associate
chair of sociology at UNC-CH, is the principal investigator of the study.
"There are not consistent parent and teen practices with regard to the
Internet across the religious traditions analyzed," Smith added.
"Mormon teens, for instance, have very high access to Internet but also
high parental monitoring and low hourly use per week. But teens from other
groups with relatively high parental monitoring also spend about the national
average of time on the Internet."
These
are the first of its own survey findings released by the NSYR, which is based
at the
The National Study of Youth and Religion is a four-year research project funded
by Lilly Endowment Inc. It began in August 2001 and will continue until August
2005. The purpose of the project is to research the shape and influence of
religion and spirituality in the lives of U.S. adolescents; to identify
effective practices in the religious, moral and social formation of the lives
of youth; to describe the extent to which youth participate in and benefit from
the programs and opportunities that religious communities are offering to their
youth; and to foster an informed national discussion about the influence of
religion in youth's lives to encourage sustained reflection about and
rethinking of our cultural and institutional practices with regard to youth and
religion.
www.youthandreligion.org