Asked by k.
Most teens believe that their social networking sites have little impact, positive or negative, on their social and emotional welfare. Approximately 70-80 percent of respondents reported that their use of social media does not generally influence their self-worth, self-confidence, how popular they feel, or their level of empathy felt for others.
Fifteen to 30 percent of teens stated that social networking did have a positive effect on their social and emotional well-being – they reported feeling less shy, more outgoing, more self-confident, more popular, more sympathetic to others, and better about themselves.
A much smaller percentage of respondents, approximately 5 percent, reported that social media made them feel more depressed, less popular, less confident, and worse about themselves.
–"Impact of Social Media on Teens' Well-Being,"
Children's Bureau Express
Which detail supports an argument that technology brings some teens together because it improves their social lives?
“Most teens believe that their social networking sites have little impact, positive or negative, on their social and emotional welfare.”
“Fifteen to 30 percent of teens . . . reported feeling less shy, more outgoing, more self-confident, more popular”
“approximately 5 percent, reported that social media made them feel more depressed”
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
“Fifteen to 30 percent of teens . . . reported feeling less shy, more outgoing, more self-confident, more popular” — this shows social media positively improving some teens' social lives, bringing them together.
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.