Young people finally flock to Twitter

Young people finally flock to Twitter They think it's pointless, narcissistic. Some don't even know what it is. Even so, more young adults and teens — normally at the cutting edge of technology — are finally coming around to Twitter, using it for class or work, monitoring the minutiae of celebrities' lives. It's not always love at first tweet, though. Many of them are doing it grudgingly, perhaps because a friend pressures them or a teacher or boss makes them try the 140-character microblogging site.

"I still find no point to using it. I'm the type of person who likes to talk to someone," says Austyn Gabig, a sophomore at the University of California, San Diego, who only joined Twitter this month because she heard Ellen DeGeneres was going to use tweets as a way to win tickets to her talk show.

DeGeneres set off a frenzy on the UCSD campus when she promised the tickets to those who, within 15 minutes of the tweet, e-mailed her cell phone photos of themselves wearing a red towel and standing with someone in a uniform.

Gabig got the tweet, found a towel — and won tickets.

She might think she won't tweet again, but social networking expert David Silver predicts she'll change her mind.

"Every semester, Twitter is the one technology that students are most resistant to," says Silver, a media studies professor at the University of San Francisco, where he regularly teaches a class on how to use various Internet applications. "But it's also the one they end up using the most."

It is a rare instance, he and others say, of young people adopting an Internet application after many of their older counterparts have already done so.

Their slowness to warm to Twitter comes in part from a fondness for the ease and directness of text messaging and other social networking services that most of their friends already use.

Many also are under the false impression that their Twitter pages have to be public, which is unappealing to a generation that's had privacy drilled into them.

Then there's the fact that their elders like it, and that's very uncool. But that's bound to change as tech-savvy Gen Xers reach middle age and baby boomers and even some senior citizens become more comfortable with social networking.

"In some ways, what we're seeing here is a kind of closing of that generational gap as it relates to technology," says Craig Watkins, a University of Texas professor and author of the book "The Young and the Digital."

Consider, for instance, that the median age of a Facebook user is now 33, despite the social-networking site's roots as a college hangout, according to the Pew Internet & American Life Project. The median age for Twitter is 31.

And while Facebook's audience is aging, Twitterers are getting younger. Internet tracker comScore Inc. found that 18- to 24-year-olds made up 18 percent of unique visitors to Twitter in September, compared with 11 percent a year earlier.

Meanwhile, kids ages 12 to 17 accounted for 12 percent of Twitter visitors last month, about double the proportion of a year earlier.

Pew researchers also found in a report released Wednesday that the number of people ages 18 to 24 who use some type of status-update service is growing quickly, too. They attribute much of the growth to Twitter.

"So much of this is driven by community. I'd even call it a tribe," says Susannah Fox, a Pew researcher who was the new report's lead author.

She said the survey also found that wireless devices are increasingly a factor in Twitter involvement, as in the more you have — laptop, mobile phone and so on — the more likely you are to tweet.

Alex Lifschitz, in his third year at the Rochester Institute of Technology in New York, uses Twitter as a tight-knit circle, keeping his contacts more limited than on Facebook.

Using his cell phone or laptop, he tweets to let professors know he can't make it to class or to ask questions about assignments. He also uses it for something as basic as organizing a food run with friends on campus.

"I can simply tweet and ask who wants to go somewhere with me, and I'll have a few takers at any given time," he says.

Mallory Wood, a recent graduate of Saint Michael's College in Vermont, is another Twitter convert — primarily for work. She's now an admissions counselor there, in charge of getting more people to follow her department on Twitter.

She uses the service to offer application fee waivers to prospective students and points them to links to student blogs, even some with complaints about campus life. "You have to be real with them," Wood says.

That's still not enough to persuade some young people to get on board.

"Quite frankly, I don't need to hear if someone stepped in dog poo on the way to class or how annoyed they are that they lost their favorite pen," says Carolyn Wald, a University of Chicago junior who has not joined Twitter and rarely posts status updates on Facebook because "I don't want to assume that people want to hear those things about me, either."

Even teen pop star Miley Cyrus stopped tweeting, griping in a rap song she posted on YouTube that, among other things, she'd grown weary of making constant, meaningless updates about what she was doing.

The key, USF professor Silver says, is showing his students how a simple status update can become a more sophisticated way to show their creative sides and, who knows, maybe land a job.

"It's just another tool in your tool kit," he says he tells his students. "The question is, 'How do you engage someone just long enough to get them to click on a link?'"

Scott Testa, a business administration professor who teaches marketing at Cabrini College in suburban Philadelphia, encourages his students to use Twitter to follow companies they would like to work for.

He also uses it to extend a conversation outside the classroom, in part because tweeting often draws comments "from those who might be a little more shy."

Renee Robinson, an associate professor of communication at Saint Xavier University in Chicago, says her students still feel overwhelmed by Twitter.

"They often see it as another level of information that they don't want," she says.

And sometimes she does, too. In one of her classes where she uses Twitter, she and her students had to cut back on people they were following because they were deluged with tweets.

So they all learned something: "Think carefully about what kind of information you want and how you want it delivered," she told them, "and then prioritize."

 

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- Posted on October 22, 2009

in the first sentence it states that: " they think its pointless". who is they? and then it states that 'they" are normally have the most " cutting-edge technology" what is considdered cutting edge? and who really uses twitter?

Twitter is better than Myspace and Facebook. There isn't as much drama, and you can talk to people quicker. It's more efficient and easier to use.

I've found recently that many of my peers are beginning to switch from Facebook to Twitter. This is mainly due to the new changes in the interface on Facebook. The appealing factor for Twitter is that it's very simple, and that's why people are moving away from Facebook. They hate the change, and they hate how it's becoming more complex. People just want a quick and easy way to be connected with their peers, family and friends. This is now what Twitter is, while Facebook is becoming deeper, almost more scrapbook, "record-your-life"- like.

I Think Twitter Is Cool! Becouse You Meet New People That have the same interest as You! Like I <3 Justin Bieber! So does over 400,000,000 Other Girls! But Serously I Love Twitter! Some times People Put what thier doing and thinking! That's what I do! :D

Twitter is not pointless. If you don't know anyone it can be boring, yes i know, but its away to know whats going on in your world. if you can't watch the news you can follow your favorite news station and get updates to your cells phone. You can find out what is going on with the celebs and even your friends. I am a twitter user or a tweeter and I don't think its pointless.

Personally I don't like Twitter to much because it uses a pretty weird concept compared to Facebook and MySpace. I do not like that you follow certain people and that you have to find who to follow. I just believe that Facebook and Myspace uses a better concept.

i kind of use twitter but i mostly like yahoo messanger i use that to text to people on there cells it is much more faster to text on the computer. i think on twitter you can text to people too. i did not know about twitter until my richest cousin got on it. i had twitter about 1 time a week. and most of the time when i am on twitter it is overstock and you can not get on twitter so i think that alot of people use twitter either here or an enother state.....

I personally don't care for Twitter. I think they should change their website because it is just like Facebook. Consider adding something to your website for a variety.

i think that it is a wast of my time to go on a website i will never use so i will go with AlexIsSoCool and say that who came up with this was bord and what to waste their time by make something on the web.

I personally really like twitter. I have a twitter and I think its a way to tell some people who arent allowed to have a myspace or facebook to see what i'm doing. Its also a great way to see what my other favorite celebrities are up to! You can learn a lot more about them and you could also learn about new stuff ahead of time. It's away for people to express them selves more.