'Mature enough to handle it?': Gendered parental interventions in and adolescents’ reactions to technology use during the pandemic

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
'Mature enough to handle it?': Gendered parental interventions in and adolescents’ reactions to technology use during the pandemic
Abstract
This study investigated how teenagers reacted to parental regulation of technology. Using longitudinal dyadic interviews with 24 teenagers and their 21 parents in two predominantly white middle-class communities, we explored how teenagers used technology during the COVID-19 pandemic and the differential consequences parental interventions had for teens’ well-being and confidence with technology. Parents’ narratives and actions about technology use were deeply gendered. Boys felt confident about their self-regulation of technology, and parents did not substantially limit boys’ technology use during the pandemic. Girls were less confident about their ability to self-regulate and either worked with their mothers to manage technology, distrusted parents who monitored them, or lacked access to virtual hangout spaces such as video games and social media. The findings illustrate how parent-teen dynamics around adolescent technology use can produce short-term gendered inequalities in teenagers’ well-being and result in long-term disadvantages for girls.
Publication
Journal of Family Issues
Volume
45
Issue
1
Pages
237-258
Date
01/2024
Journal Abbr
Journal of Family Issues
Language
en
ISSN
0192-513X, 1552-5481
Short Title
“mature enough to handle it?
Accessed
19/06/2024, 20:44
Library Catalogue
DOI.org (Crossref)
Citation
Steinberg, H., Mollborn, S., & Pace, J. (2024). “Mature enough to handle it?”: Gendered parental interventions in and adolescents’ reactions to technology use during the pandemic. Journal of Family Issues, 45(1), 237–258. https://doi.org/10.1177/0192513X221150979