3. Who are the Millennial
Generation?
Also known as Generation
Y, Generation M, and Net Generation
Neil Howe and Bill Strauss coined the
term “Millenials”
4. Digital Immigrants
Born before 1980
People born before the advent of
digital technologies
Not as technology oriented or as
savvy as Digital Natives
They have adapted to the digital
world, but they still have an
“immigrants accent”
5. Digital Natives
People born after 1980
People born in the digital age
Technology is natural and easy for
them to use
Surrounded by computers, video
games, digital music, video
cameras, cell phones
6. Millennial Generation
They are the largest
generation, consisting of 30 percent of
the US population
They are the most racially diverse
generation
7. Who are the Millennial
Generations
Children of Baby Boomers and
Generation X’s
Most educated generation
8. Millennial Learners Values
Focus on family
Structured, civic lifestyles
Multiculturalism
Globalism
Terrorism
Technology
17. Use of Technology
Social Media
(Mediafire, Netflix, Itunes)
Social Networking
(facebook, Tweeter, Skype)
18. Impact of Technology on
Education
Education is student centered, not
lecturer centered
There is more information, and its
more dynamic
Education can be distant and mobile
Encouragement of
humanism, globalism, and
multiculturalism
Learning is more networked and
collaborative
More librarians will be need
19. Problems Millennial Generation
face
The social and technological gap
beteen the educators and Millennial
generation.
Temptation to plagiarize, since it is
easier with technology
Easy to violate copy right laws
Cyber bulling
Privacy
20. References
Cosidine, D., Horton, J., & Moorman, G. (2009). Teaching and Reading the Millennial
Generation Through Media Literacy. Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 52,
473-481.
Jones, A. (2008). Riding the Technology Rapids with the Millennials. Christian Librarians,
51,62-67.
Howe, N., & Strauss, W. (2006). Millennials and the Pop Culture. Great Falls, VA: Life Course
Howe, N. & Strauss,W. (2007). Today's teens are less selfish than some adults think. Retrieved
November 11, 2011, from The Christian Science Monitor:
http://vvww.csmonitor.com/2007/0305/p09s02-coop.htm.
Lancaster, L. & D. Stillman (2003). When the generations collide. New York: 1, 1.
McGylnn, A. (2005). Teaching Millenials, Our Newest Cultural Cohort. Education Digest, 71,
12-16.
Oblinger, D. (2003). Boomers, GenXers & Millennials: understanding the new students.
RetrievedNovember 11, 2006, from EDUCAUSE:
http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/ermO342.pdf.
Phyliss, N. (2011). Meeting the Needs of the 21st Century Student. Borough of Manhattan
Community College, 17, 48.
Prensky, M. (2001). Digital natives, digital immigrants. Retrieved from Marc Prensky's Web site:
http://www.marcprensky.com/writing/Prensky%20%20Digital%20Natives,%20Digital
20Immigrants%20-%20Part1.pd
All images used in the presentation were retrieved from PowerPoint clip art search.
“Traditionalists born before1946 are patriotic and tend to be loyal, fiscally conservative andhave faith in institutions. Baby Boomers bornbetween 1946 and 1964are described as idealistic, competitive, questioning authority, and desireto put their own stamp on things. They are sandwiched between parentsand their children and they challenge institutions.” People born from1965–1981 are known as Generation X, and they are “eclectic, resourceful,self-reliant, distrust institutions, and are highly adaptive to both change andtechnology.”
“The Millennial Generation is generally agreedto be those born between approximately 1982and 2002. Neil Howe and Bill Strauss arecredited with coining the term Millennials” (Alison, J.; 2009, p. 64).
Digital immigrants are born prior to 1980 about a decade ago. Marc Prensky thinks that digital natives are different from digital immigrants not just in how they dress, but in language, music, and how they approach technology (Prensky,2001).
Children who have grown up since the emergence ofthe World Wide Web and the assortment of relateddigital technologies (e.g., cell phones, text messaging,video games, and instant messaging) are now beingreferred to as the Millennials (Howe & Strauss, 2000).
“Millennials are first of all the largest generation:76 million as of the end of the year 2000(Howe & Strauss, 2000, p. 14).The Millennialsare also a diverse generation.”
“Millennial are a confident and optimisticgeneration of achievers. While it may bedebated by some, rising test scores haveoccurred among Milennials, more kidsthan ever say they like school, and a largerpercentage are taking Advanced Placementcourses” (Howe & Strauss, 2000, p. 9).
“Milennials getalong with their parents far better than previousgenerations have, perhaps contributing to therise of the "helicopter parent" as they don'tmind their parents getting involved in theirbusiness” (Alison, J.; 2009, p. 65). “One highly publicized study entitled "EgosInflating Over Time" has found Millennials tobe the most narcissistic generation (Alison, J.; 2009, p. 65)”.
“Millennials are an impatient generationthat has grown up multitasking” (Alison, J., 2008, p. 65). “Generation Yers are commonly characterized as having low thresholds for boredom and showing short attention spans” (Amy, H.; 2010, p. 13). They are “highly scheduled” ( "Millennial" students gravitate toward group activity” (McGlynn,A.; 2005, p. 13 ).“Millennialsare at ease with multitasking, quite happy tobe chatting via IM and listening to musicwhile doing their homework (Oblinger, 2003, p.4O).”
“Millennial are a confident and optimisticgeneration of achievers. While it may bedebated by some, rising test scores haveoccurred among Milennials, more kidsthan ever say they like school, and a largerpercentage are taking Advanced Placementcourses” (Howe & Strauss, 2000, p. 9).
They are the "focus of the mostsweeping youth safety movement in Americanhistory" beginning with the rise of child safetydevices in the 80s, continuing through thepost-Columbine focus on school safety (Howe& Strauss, 2000, p. 43).
“These students grew up in a time of economic prosperity” (McGylnn,2005,p.13).
“Millennials were born around the time thepersonal computer was introduced, andtwenty percent began using computers at theearly ages of 5-8, while "virtually all studentswere using computers" by the ages of 16-18(Obhnger, 2003, p.39)”
All of those tools are used at a much more frequent rate by people from the Millennial generation than by any other generation.
“Public schools typically placeheavy restrictions on the use of the Internet. Socialnetworking sites such as MySpace, Facebook, andYouTube are often blocked in libraries and computerlabs. The result is a failure to build a bridge betweenthe technological world Millennials live in and theclassrooms we expect them to learn in. Such restrictionsare almost always justified by claiming that theyare intended to protect students. Such protection,however well-intentioned, actually fails to prepareyoung people by not providing the adult supervisionand guidance that many of them would benefit fromduring their online encounters” (Cosidine, D.; Horton, J. & Moorman, G.; 2009, 473).“Thus Millennials needlibrarians more than ever because they live ina changing world of information overload” (Alison, J.; 2009, p. 65). “Most importantly librarians need to emphasize that not all information is found on the Web and that the information found there might not be reliable, depending on its source” (Phyliss, N.; 2011, p. 48)