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SNSs & Friendship
For most teens, friendship-driven and interest-
driven practices play a more central role in structuring
new media participation than interest-driven practices.

  MySpace and Facebook are common tools for friendship-driven practices

     These sites are emblematic of the genre of
friendship-driven participation and support the kind of
social relations that center on popularity, romantic
relationships, and status
“If you’re not on MySpace you don’t exist”

   Teens use social networking sites (SNSs) to keep in touch
    with their friends, classmates, and peers when getting
    together is not possible.

   For many contemporary teenagers, losing access to
    social media is tantamount to losing their social world
 Teen practices when using social media mirror those
  that scholars have documented in other places where
  teens gather with peers
    Teens gather in networked public spaces just as they do in public places
     like parking lots or shopping malls for a variety of reasons: including to
     negotiate identity, gossip, support one another, jockey for status,
     collaborate, share information, joke, etc.

 Social media allow teens to extend their interactions
  beyond physical boundaries
Technology plays a huge role in establishing, reinforcing,
    complicating, and damaging friendship-driven social bonds.

This chapter examines how social media intersects with
  four types of everyday peer negotiations:

 Making friends

 Performing friendships

 Articulating friendship hierarchies

 Navigating issues of status, attention, and drama
“1950’s have been identified as a pivotal period
     that saw the emergence of many of the dynamics
     that define contemporary youth peer culture and
     adult attitudes toward youth. This period saw a
     broadening of the base of teens who attend high
     school, a growth in youth popular and
     commercial cultures, and the emergence of an
     age-segregated peer culture that dominated
     youth’s everyday negotiations over status and
     identity.” (82)

As more and more youth attended high school they were becoming more
   independent as a culture from their parents. They were starting to make
   their own decisions, which were influenced heavily by others because of their
   constant contact with others their age. I think that all the contact this
   generation had with others their age increased the influence status and
   identity had in their everyday lives. This period started the migration of
   youth from public forms of friendship and gathering to, eventually, SNSs.
“The peer relations of children and teens are structured by a developmental
  logic supported by educational institutions organized by rigid age boundaries.
  We share a cultural consensus that the ability to socialize with peers and
  make friendships is a key component of growing up as a competent social
  being, and that young people need to be immersed in peer cultures from an
  early age.” (83)

As a culture we put a great amount of value into having lasting relationships and
   socializing with others from an early age. When we have children we plan
   play dates as soon as they are able to recognize the presence of other
   people. The social media world acted as almost a new culture for people to
   be immersed in and foster relationships through. The relations and social
   dynamics that play out in school extend into the spaces created through
   social media. The places that teens would normally socialize in have been
   created in the virtual world that allows them to socialize with those they
   may not see on a daily basis.
Making Friends
  “Social media theoretically allow teens to move beyond geographic
   restrictions and connect with new people. Presumably, this means that
   participants could develop relations with people who are quite different from
   them.” (88)

Although one would think that SNSs allow teens to connect with new people
   from different walks of life, this is typically not what happens. Like earlier
   discussed, SNSs are used by teens as virtual “hang-out spots” where they are
   unrestricted and typically uncensored. As Sabrina from the text describes, I
   just find my friends and hang out.” (89)

  “This is not to say that teens to not leverage social media to develop
   friendships. Tees frequently use social media as additional channels of
   communication to get to know classmates and turn acquaintances into
   friendships.” (89)

SNSs can be useful tools to learning more about acquaintances and classmates.
   Teens often use social media to make new friends of develop new
   friendships, but they usually do so with acquaintances they have met already
   or friends of friends.
Some teens, especially marginalized or ostracized ones,
  use the opportunity that SNSs give them to meet new
  people from different areas.

Teens who are driven by specific interests that may not by
  supported by their schools, such as gaming, can build
  relations with others online.
      This is exactly the kind of SNS usage that caused schools to
       implement the same sort of “stranger danger” education about
       people met in the real world to those met online.
      Mainstream media, law enforcement, teachers, and parents
       reinforce the message that interacting with strangers online is
       risky.
Performing Friendships
“One of the ways in which social media alter friendship practices is
  through the forced- and often public- articulation of social
  connections” (94)

This serves three purposes
     Lists (such as friends list of buddy lists) act as an address book allowing
      participants to keep a record of all the people they know
     They allow participants to leverage privacy settings to control who
      accesses their content
     The public display of connections that takes place in social network sites
      can represent an individual’s social identity and status

This is one way that teens are able to monitor and shape their status
  online. The amount of Facebook friends or followers on Twitter they
  have represent a sort of popularity or status in the real world.
The idea of the “friend request” adds another layer of
  social processing to the process of performing
  friendships through SNSs.

“Friending” has become a ritual that can permit or
  prompt direct interaction when teens involved see one
  another in school or at a group function; it lays the
  groundwork for building a friendship and gives a reason
  to single the other out from the group and initiate
  communications.
Friendship Hierarchies
Features on social media sites like Top Friends on
  MySpace creates a hierarchy among online
  friendships. This allowed users to rank their
  friends based on relational closeness.
    “Reciprocity plays a central role in the negotiation
     of Top Friends. Many teens expect that if they list
     someone as a Top Friend, that person should list
     them in return. Teens worry about not being listed
     and about failing to list those who list them.” (101)

Examples from the text, such as a fifteen year old
  named Jordan stating “Oh, it’s so stressful
  because if you’re in someone else’s Top Friends
  then you feel bad if they’re not in yours,”
  highlight the power of this feature in shaping
  how teens interact with SNSs. The main problem
  with online rankings like Top Friends is that it
  created hierarchies that are not present offline,
  forcing a new set of social status negotiations.
Status, Attention, and Drama
“While teen dramas are only one component of friendship, they often
  are made extremely visible by social media. The persistent and
  networked qualities of social media alter the ways that these dramas
  play out in teen life.” (104)

Even though I am older than the group described in the text, I see this
  exact thing happen on a daily basis. Drama is either created online
  between two people or groups of people, or happens in real life and
  is continued on SNSs. For this reason it is important to pay attention
  to the role that social media play in the negotiation of teen status.
“Gossip and rumors have played a role
  in teen struggles for status and
  attention since well before social
  media entered the scene.” (105)

I am a strong advocate for SNSs and use
   them daily personally and for work.
   They have a lot of great qualities for
   maintaining friendships. However,
   many teens have not learned how to
   manage and maintain friendships in
   real life when they begin to use
   SNSs. This causes the gossip and
   rumors that serve as a catalyst for
   teen drama.

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SNSs & Friendship

  • 2. For most teens, friendship-driven and interest- driven practices play a more central role in structuring new media participation than interest-driven practices.   MySpace and Facebook are common tools for friendship-driven practices These sites are emblematic of the genre of friendship-driven participation and support the kind of social relations that center on popularity, romantic relationships, and status
  • 3. “If you’re not on MySpace you don’t exist”  Teens use social networking sites (SNSs) to keep in touch with their friends, classmates, and peers when getting together is not possible.  For many contemporary teenagers, losing access to social media is tantamount to losing their social world
  • 4.  Teen practices when using social media mirror those that scholars have documented in other places where teens gather with peers   Teens gather in networked public spaces just as they do in public places like parking lots or shopping malls for a variety of reasons: including to negotiate identity, gossip, support one another, jockey for status, collaborate, share information, joke, etc.  Social media allow teens to extend their interactions beyond physical boundaries
  • 5. Technology plays a huge role in establishing, reinforcing, complicating, and damaging friendship-driven social bonds. This chapter examines how social media intersects with four types of everyday peer negotiations:  Making friends  Performing friendships  Articulating friendship hierarchies  Navigating issues of status, attention, and drama
  • 6. “1950’s have been identified as a pivotal period that saw the emergence of many of the dynamics that define contemporary youth peer culture and adult attitudes toward youth. This period saw a broadening of the base of teens who attend high school, a growth in youth popular and commercial cultures, and the emergence of an age-segregated peer culture that dominated youth’s everyday negotiations over status and identity.” (82) As more and more youth attended high school they were becoming more independent as a culture from their parents. They were starting to make their own decisions, which were influenced heavily by others because of their constant contact with others their age. I think that all the contact this generation had with others their age increased the influence status and identity had in their everyday lives. This period started the migration of youth from public forms of friendship and gathering to, eventually, SNSs.
  • 7. “The peer relations of children and teens are structured by a developmental logic supported by educational institutions organized by rigid age boundaries. We share a cultural consensus that the ability to socialize with peers and make friendships is a key component of growing up as a competent social being, and that young people need to be immersed in peer cultures from an early age.” (83) As a culture we put a great amount of value into having lasting relationships and socializing with others from an early age. When we have children we plan play dates as soon as they are able to recognize the presence of other people. The social media world acted as almost a new culture for people to be immersed in and foster relationships through. The relations and social dynamics that play out in school extend into the spaces created through social media. The places that teens would normally socialize in have been created in the virtual world that allows them to socialize with those they may not see on a daily basis.
  • 8. Making Friends   “Social media theoretically allow teens to move beyond geographic restrictions and connect with new people. Presumably, this means that participants could develop relations with people who are quite different from them.” (88) Although one would think that SNSs allow teens to connect with new people from different walks of life, this is typically not what happens. Like earlier discussed, SNSs are used by teens as virtual “hang-out spots” where they are unrestricted and typically uncensored. As Sabrina from the text describes, I just find my friends and hang out.” (89)   “This is not to say that teens to not leverage social media to develop friendships. Tees frequently use social media as additional channels of communication to get to know classmates and turn acquaintances into friendships.” (89) SNSs can be useful tools to learning more about acquaintances and classmates. Teens often use social media to make new friends of develop new friendships, but they usually do so with acquaintances they have met already or friends of friends.
  • 9. Some teens, especially marginalized or ostracized ones, use the opportunity that SNSs give them to meet new people from different areas. Teens who are driven by specific interests that may not by supported by their schools, such as gaming, can build relations with others online.   This is exactly the kind of SNS usage that caused schools to implement the same sort of “stranger danger” education about people met in the real world to those met online.   Mainstream media, law enforcement, teachers, and parents reinforce the message that interacting with strangers online is risky.
  • 10. Performing Friendships “One of the ways in which social media alter friendship practices is through the forced- and often public- articulation of social connections” (94) This serves three purposes   Lists (such as friends list of buddy lists) act as an address book allowing participants to keep a record of all the people they know   They allow participants to leverage privacy settings to control who accesses their content   The public display of connections that takes place in social network sites can represent an individual’s social identity and status This is one way that teens are able to monitor and shape their status online. The amount of Facebook friends or followers on Twitter they have represent a sort of popularity or status in the real world.
  • 11. The idea of the “friend request” adds another layer of social processing to the process of performing friendships through SNSs. “Friending” has become a ritual that can permit or prompt direct interaction when teens involved see one another in school or at a group function; it lays the groundwork for building a friendship and gives a reason to single the other out from the group and initiate communications.
  • 12. Friendship Hierarchies Features on social media sites like Top Friends on MySpace creates a hierarchy among online friendships. This allowed users to rank their friends based on relational closeness.   “Reciprocity plays a central role in the negotiation of Top Friends. Many teens expect that if they list someone as a Top Friend, that person should list them in return. Teens worry about not being listed and about failing to list those who list them.” (101) Examples from the text, such as a fifteen year old named Jordan stating “Oh, it’s so stressful because if you’re in someone else’s Top Friends then you feel bad if they’re not in yours,” highlight the power of this feature in shaping how teens interact with SNSs. The main problem with online rankings like Top Friends is that it created hierarchies that are not present offline, forcing a new set of social status negotiations.
  • 13. Status, Attention, and Drama “While teen dramas are only one component of friendship, they often are made extremely visible by social media. The persistent and networked qualities of social media alter the ways that these dramas play out in teen life.” (104) Even though I am older than the group described in the text, I see this exact thing happen on a daily basis. Drama is either created online between two people or groups of people, or happens in real life and is continued on SNSs. For this reason it is important to pay attention to the role that social media play in the negotiation of teen status.
  • 14. “Gossip and rumors have played a role in teen struggles for status and attention since well before social media entered the scene.” (105) I am a strong advocate for SNSs and use them daily personally and for work. They have a lot of great qualities for maintaining friendships. However, many teens have not learned how to manage and maintain friendships in real life when they begin to use SNSs. This causes the gossip and rumors that serve as a catalyst for teen drama.