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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsTeenagers Are Losing Confidence in the American Dream
http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2015/06/teenagers-are-losing-confidence-in-the-american-dream/395780/In 1996, when asked a series of questions about the brightness of her future, one high-school senior in an unnamed Midwestern state said, Theres been extraordinary examples of people that have been poor and stuff that have risen to the top just from their personal hard work
not everybody can do that, I realize, but I think a lot of people could if they just tried.
In 2011, a survey with identically worded questions was done in the same state, with the same age group. You can always work hard, but if you arent given the opportunity or you dont have the funds to be able to continue working hard then you never get the chance to get out of where you are, said one student.
What a difference 15 years makes. In the 1990s, those loosed upon the world after high-school graduation faced a booming economy and relatively sunny job prospects; more recently, high-school and college graduates have faced less hospitable conditions. A study published recently in the Journal of Poverty juxtaposes adolescents perceptions from those two eras, and the results, while qualitative and limited by their small sample size, suggest that young Americans outlook on social mobility has gotten bleaker. (The studys findings align with a more-expansive survey of young people suggesting an erosion of confidence in the American Dream.)
The studys authors, Carol Hostetter, Sabrina Williamson Sullenberger, and Leila Wood, observe that the palpable faith in meritocracy in the 90s faded, making way in the 2010s for a belief in what they call The American Dream 2.0. In this version of the American Dream, anyone can go to college IF they have the resources, are ok about going into debt, can somehow get the coveted scholarship, are willing to go to community college, or come from a family of means, they write. The new normal appears to be meritocracy with an asterisk.
In 2011, a survey with identically worded questions was done in the same state, with the same age group. You can always work hard, but if you arent given the opportunity or you dont have the funds to be able to continue working hard then you never get the chance to get out of where you are, said one student.
What a difference 15 years makes. In the 1990s, those loosed upon the world after high-school graduation faced a booming economy and relatively sunny job prospects; more recently, high-school and college graduates have faced less hospitable conditions. A study published recently in the Journal of Poverty juxtaposes adolescents perceptions from those two eras, and the results, while qualitative and limited by their small sample size, suggest that young Americans outlook on social mobility has gotten bleaker. (The studys findings align with a more-expansive survey of young people suggesting an erosion of confidence in the American Dream.)
The studys authors, Carol Hostetter, Sabrina Williamson Sullenberger, and Leila Wood, observe that the palpable faith in meritocracy in the 90s faded, making way in the 2010s for a belief in what they call The American Dream 2.0. In this version of the American Dream, anyone can go to college IF they have the resources, are ok about going into debt, can somehow get the coveted scholarship, are willing to go to community college, or come from a family of means, they write. The new normal appears to be meritocracy with an asterisk.
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Teenagers Are Losing Confidence in the American Dream (Original Post)
KamaAina
Jun 2015
OP
xfundy
(5,105 posts)1. As are adults.
NewSystemNeeded
(111 posts)2. The American Dream never existed for some of us.
We were born into perpetually impoverished areas and learned the art of tackling one day at a time, always a paycheck away from destitution.
And we won't shut up about economic inequality. It is the defining issue of our time.
KamaAina
(78,249 posts)3. Yup.
And welcome!