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Canadian Teens Less Internet Savvy Than Adults


Yes, but can they google?

In Canada, teens (13-17) are actually online less adults - 13 hours per week as opposed to 19 hours - and their comfort level with technology is much lower than that of adults, Ipsos Reid finds when comparing a study of older adults (pdf) with a study of teens, MarketingCharts writes.

Some factors, according to the study, that might account for the relatively little time teens spend on online:

  • Parents influence teens' internet use - over half (54 percent) of respondents said their parents place time limits or curfews on their internet time.
  • The internet is of less importance - only 37 percent agree that using the internet is an important part of their day (compared with 51 percent of adults).

ipsos-reid-canadian-online-teen-importance-activities.jpg

However, older teens (18-21) do rank the internet high in importance for some activities:

  • Contacting someone they have lost touch with (77 percent have done so; 46 percent of adults say they have done this)
  • participating in live, online chat (68 percent have done this, compared with 38 percent of adults)
  • visiting/browsing an online social network/community (52 percent have done this; 36 percent of adults have done so)

Online Socialization

Online socialization is the most important use of the internet for teens, the survey found:

ipsos-reid-canadian-online-teen-socialization-frequency.jpg

  • Some 88 percent of teens have participated in an online social activity (compared with 70 percent of adults).
  • 61 percent of teens say the internet is important to their social life.
  • 52 percent of those who visit online social networks or communities say it is important to their day-to-day life.

Participation in online social networks or communities such as Windows Live Space, YouTube, Facebook, and MySpace is high:

  • 59 percent visit online social networks or communities a few times a week to daily.
  • Those who are aware of the websites YouTube and Windows Live Space report that they spend a weekly average of five hours and seven hours, respectively, on those sites.

Live online chats are popular:

  • 74 percent have used instant messaging to communicate with friends or family members.
  • 76 percent of teens (12-21) participate in chats on a daily or weekly basis.

Other Online Activities

When they're not socializing online, teens are…

  • Downloading music from the internet:
    • 64 percent have downloaded digital music or MP3 files.
    • 30 percent do this often, from a few times a week to daily (compared with 7 percent of adults).
  • Gaming - over half of teens play against people they know or complete strangers and visit gaming websites at least a few times a week or more.

Comfort Level with Technology

  • 28 percent of online teens consider themselves to be very skilled or expert in the use of the internet.
  • 48 percent identify themselves as being fairly skilled.
  • 24 percent admit to not being skilled in internet use.

About the survey: More than 1,200 online interviews were completed among Canadian youth aged 12–17. The Ipsos Canadian Inter@ctive Reid Report, an online survey of 1,000 web users from its Canadian Internet Panel online and 1,000 interviews via telephone with Canadian adults, were used for points of comparison.

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