There at it all day and night. There doing it when
everybody’s fast asleep. There doing it at the dinner table. Most do it in
school at lunch and even in class with the teacher in there. Students are
addicted to texting and do it everywhere.
Texting has become a worldwide trend which almost everyone
participates in, especially teenagers. And unlimited plans offered by companies
like AT&T, Version, and Samsung aren’t making it better. In 2008 according to the Nielsen Company
teenagers send at least 2,272 text messages per month. That’s a total of 27,264
texts a year.
But physicians and psychologists say texting isn’t good for
you. They say it can lead to anxiety, distraction in school, falling grades,
repetitive stress injury and sleep deprivation.
Dr. Martin Joffe, a pediatrician in Greenbrae, Calif., gave
a survey to students at two different high schools and learned they send
hundreds of text every single day.
Professionals say that adolescences are supposed to grow up,
find a job and live a peaceful life but texting has become an obstacle in that
process. But since technology makes it easier to stay in contact with somebody
teens are texting parents at least 15 times asking meaningless questions.
Michael Hausauer, a
psychotherapist at Oakland, Calif., says teens have an understandable interest
in phones and texting because they can be in the loop, communicate to their
friends. This gives texting great benefits and harm.
It’s said texting is doing damage to teenager’s thumbs. An
example is how Annie Wagner, 15, a ninth grade honor student in Bethesda, Md.,
used to text on a small LG phone as fast as she did on a keyboard. Then she
started noticing cramps in her thumbs. Now she has the iPhone and she says
texting is slower and less painful.
Peter W. Johnson and professor of environmental and
occupational health sciences at the University of Washington said “it’s too
early to determine if this type of stress is damaged. But he also added “Based
on our experiences with computer users, we know intensive repetitive use of the
upper extremities can lead to musculoskeletal disorders, so we have some reason
to be concerned that too much texting could lead to temporary or permanent
damage to the thumbs.”
Another amazing texting story is how Greg Hardesty reported
that his 13-year-old daughter Reina sent 14,528 in a single month. She would
have the phone on when she went to bed, getting up to answer her friend’s
replies. Then when her texting was put in the paper her texts increased to
24,000 but when her grades started failing the phone was taking by her parents.
Eventually she was given the phone back when she improved
her grades but her texting was limited.
In conclusion texting is activity that is greatly enjoyed by
teens everywhere and shouldn’t be stopped but there should limits to how much
and how long they text but the limits wouldn’t be that strict.
Yedaiah,
ReplyDeleteThis is mostly a paraphrase/summary of the article and not a blog post. You need to use the blog post format and make certain that you give your own thoughts and opinions about the issue. 60