tailieunhanh - SOCIAL MEDIA & MOBILE INTERNET USE AMONG TEENS AND YOUNG ADULTS

Australia has two public service broadcasters: the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) and the Special Broadcasting Service (SBS). ABC is modeled after the BBC and aims to provide traditional public service content on TV and radio; SBS aims to provide a more specialized service of multicultural and multilingual programming (Hitchens 2006: 24). ABC (all channels included) has an audience share of 14 percent; SBS reaches 5 percent of the total audience (OzTAM 2010). Due to ABC’s status as the major public broadcaster, we focus primarily below on its funding and oversight. Australia is also notable for its Community Broadcasting Association which. | Pew Internet Pew Internet American Life Project a project of the PewResearchCenter Social Media Mobile Internet Use Among Teens and Young Adults By Amanda Lenhart Kristen Purcell Aaron Smith and Kathryn Zickuhr February 3 2010 http Reports 2010 Pew Internet American Life Project An initiative of the Pew Research Center 1615 L St. NW-Suite 700 Washington . 20036 202-419-4500 I MILLENNIALS A PORTRAIT OF GENERATION NEXT This publication is part of a Pew Research Center report series that looks at the values attitudes and experiences of America s next generation the Millennials. Find out how today s teens and twentysomethings are reshaping the nation at millennials 1 Summary of Findings Since 2006 blogging has dropped among teens and young adults while simultaneously rising among older adults. As the tools and technology embedded in social networking sites change and use of the sites continues to grow youth may be exchanging macro-blogging for microblogging with status updates. Blogging has declined in popularity among both teens and young adults since 2006. Blog commenting has also dropped among teens. 14 of online teens now say they blog down from 28 of teen internet users in 2006. This decline is also reflected in the lower incidence of teen commenting on blogs within social networking websites 52 of teen social network users report commenting on friends blogs down from the 76 who did so in 2006. By comparison the prevalence of blogging within the overall adult internet population has remained steady in recent years. Pew Internet surveys since 2005 have consistently found that roughly one in ten online adults maintain a personal online journal or blog. While blogging among adults as a whole has remained steady the prevalence of blogging within specific age groups has changed dramatically in recent years. Specifically a sharp decline in blogging by young adults has been tempered

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