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Jeffrey Jensen Arnett Clark University Emerging Adults, Millennials, and the Challenges of Teaching Today’s Students.

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Presentation on theme: "Jeffrey Jensen Arnett Clark University Emerging Adults, Millennials, and the Challenges of Teaching Today’s Students."— Presentation transcript:

1 Jeffrey Jensen Arnett Clark University Emerging Adults, Millennials, and the Challenges of Teaching Today’s Students

2 What is emerging adulthood? Lasts from about age 18-25; for many, lasts through the twenties Begins with the end of secondary school; ends with the attainment of full adult status--? Exists mainly in developed societies, but growing in developing countries

3 Social changes leading to emerging adulthood Later ages of marriage and parenthood Longer and more widespread education Birth control, fewer children Tolerance of premarital sexuality, cohabitation Ambivalence about adulthood

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5 Median Marriage Age (Females) in Selected Countries Industrialized Countries Age Developing Countries Age _____________________________________________ United States 27 Egypt 19 Canada 29 Ethiopia 17 Germany 30 Ghana 20 France 30 Nigeria 18 Spain 30 India 18 Japan 29 Indonesia 21 Australia 29 Guatemala 19

6 Five features of emerging adulthood (Based on 300 interviews with American ages 18-29, diverse backgrounds.) The age of identity explorations The age of instability The self-focused age The age of feeling in-between The age of possibilities

7 The Age of Identity Explorations “This is a time of life for finding out who I really am” 77% of Americans ages 18-29 agree (Clark University Poll of Emerging Adults, 2012) Love: searching for a “soul mate” ---”When you marry, you want to find your soul mate, first and foremost.” 94% of Americans 20-29 agree. Work: searching for self-fulfillment; money is not enough “It is more important to me to enjoy my job than to make a lot of money.” 79% of Americans ages 18-29 agree (Clark University Poll of Emerging Adults, 2012)

8 The age of instability “This time of my life is full of changes.” 84% of Americans ages 18-29 agree (Clark University Poll of Emerging Adults, 2012) Average number of job changes from age 18 to 29: Seven

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11 The self-focused age: More independent, not tied to others “This is a time of my life for focusing on myself. 71% of Americans ages 18-29 agree. “I think I want to get more in touch with myself. I want to be a little selfish for awhile, and selfishness and marriage don't seem to go hand in hand. I'd like to be able to experience as much as I can before I get married, just so I can be well- rounded.” (Rosa, 24 year-old Latina)

12 … but not selfish “It is important to me to have a career that does some good in the world.” 86% of Americans ages 18-29 agree (Clark University Poll of Emerging Adults, 2012)

13 The age of feeling in-between Not yet fully adult, and definitely not “kids” or “adolescents” Adults in some ways but not others.

14 Do you feel that you have reached adulthood?

15 “Not absolutely, because I still sometimes get up in the morning and say, ‘Good Lord! I’m actually a grown up!’ ‘Cause I still feel like a kid. I’ve done things like just got up one morning and said, you know, ‘I’m going to Mexico’ and just get up and go. And I should have been doing other things.” (Terrell, 23 year-old African American)

16 The age of possibilities “I am confident that eventually I will get what I want out of life.” 89% of Americans ages 18-29 agree (Clark University Poll of Emerging Adults, 2012)

17 The age of possibilities: Do you think your life will be better or worse than your parents’ lives have been? “Better economically. Better personally. I just think by the time my parents reached my age, they'd already run into some barricades that prevented them from getting what they wanted, personally and family-wise. And so far, I've avoided those things, and I don't really see those things in my life. I don't like my job. I'm frustrated about the lack of relationships with females. But in general, I think I'm headed in the right direction.” (Bob, 23 year-old White American)

18 EA and the college experience Identity explorations: Lots of career paths and love partners to choose from. Instability: Lots of changes in career paths, love partners, etc. Only half of those who enter a four-year school have graduated six years later (National Center for Education Statistics). Self-focused: Developing knowledge, skills. In-between: Dorms, administrators. Possibilities: Still broad, but narrow in the course of college years. Instead of marking the transition to a stable young adulthood, graduation is just the beginning.

19 Is it generational? Baby Boomers, Generation X… Y? Z? Distinctive features of today’s EA generation: The “new media” generation --“I rely a lot on the support I get from friends and family through email, texting, and social networking websites.” 57% of 18- 21s agree (2012 Clark Poll). --About half are in contact with parents “every day or almost ever day,” mostly via texting and phoning. More globally aware, globally connected; the “First Globals” (Zogby) More accepting of differences in religion, ethnicity, sexual orientation. BUT: EA is here to stay

20 Don’t forget the good news “This time of my life is fun and exciting.” 83% of 18-25s agree. (CUPEA) Lower rates of alcohol use, sexual risk behavior, automobile risk behavior, and crime than previous generation.

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22 “Emerging Adulthood: The Winding Road from the Late Teens through the Twenties,” by Jeffrey Jensen Arnett, Oxford University Press. 10-year anniversary edition coming in 2014. www.jeffreyarnett.com Society for the Study of Emerging Adulthood, www.ssea.org

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