Social Networking: The Death of Communication

730 Words2 Pages

Social media has taken the world by storm over the past several years. Numbers of users and numbers of networks being set up in other nations has grown quite substantially as the popularity and demand for social media has increased. The entire purpose of setting up social media networks around the world is to allow and promote the world to communicate and connect with one another. However, the trend that seems to be following this widespread connection and communication is the exact opposite. Social media has begun to create an unsociable generation of young adults. Even though social media allows people to connect and communicate online, the issue is the fact that these communication skills are only being used online! While, obviously, not an intended consequence of social media, the widespread emergence of social media into today’s society has created a generation of people that are lacking in communication skills in real social setting.

While social media can not be fully blamed for created a generation of people that no longer can communicate effectively with one another face-to-face, social media is definitely apart of the root cause. This is simply because of the way that younger generations learn to develop their communication skills and personal relationships have changed. An article from The Argus explains this notion in further detail, writing that “Traditionally, teenagers have learned how to build relationships with other people around their neighborhood or school, but because of social networking, real and hard-earned relationships are now replaced with online ones.” As the article explains, prior to the internet and social media, personal relationships and face-to-face communication skills was apart of the gro...

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...line that social media offers has created this addictive nature within this generation. This is a very worrisome thought when thinking about the future and the skills that this generation will pass down to the next generations. The Forbes article stated it best, “With all the powerful social technologies at our fingertips, we are more connected – and potentially more disconnected – than ever before.”

Work Cited

Burchat, Kylie. “Social media: changing communication forever.” The Argus. The Argus, 13 Mar. 2014. Web. 18 Nov. 2014. .

Tardanico, Susan. “Is Social Media Sabotaging Real Communication?.” Forbes. Forbes Magazine, 30 Apr. 2012. Web. 18 Nov. 2014. .

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