Wow! Kids these days really are worse than they used to be!

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We heard it a million times when we were kids “Kids today…” and then something derogatory. They told us how we didn’t appreciate things and how sad that we weren’t raised in the “good ol’ days”. But it seems teens today really are the generation that is taking the cake in the “kids today…” category.

According to The Huffington Post:

If it seems like your teenager, and his or her friends, are more interested in money, but less motivated to work than you were at their age, that might be because it’s true. According to a new study on the attitudes and values of high school seniors from the 1970s to now, there’s a growing gap between teens’ desire to work hard and own nice things.

“Compared to previous generations, recent high school graduates are more likely to want lots of money and nice things, but less likely to say they’re willing to work hard to earn them,” said study co-author Jean Twenge, a professor of psychology at San Diego State University and author of the book Generation Me, in a press release.

Materialism rose substantially from the mid-1970s, peaking in the late 1980s and early 1990s, but remaining at historically high levels through the start of the new millennium, the study claims. The findings were published in the Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin on Wednesday. The researchers used a sample of more than 355,000 high school students who participated in the so-called “Monitoring the Future” survey, an ongoing study of the behaviors of adolescents and teens that started in the mid-1970s.

To gauge materialistic values, researchers looked at things like whether teenagers wanted a new car every few years or hoped to be wealthy some day.

Teens today appear to desire money more than high school seniors did in the 1970s: 62 percent of those surveyed from 2005 to 2007 said it was important to them to have a lot of money, compared to just 48 percent from 1976 to 1978.

In the 1970s, nearly 49 percent of teens said they expected to earn more than their parents; by the 2000s, that had jumped to 60 percent.

But at the same time that teens’ desire for wealth and certain material goods has increased, work ethic has sloughed off, the study found.

In the late 1970s, a quarter of students surveyed admitted they did not want to work hard. By the mid-2000s, that had jumped to 39 percent.

The study raises a major question, but can’t fully answer it — Why are attitudes shifting this way? Relying on prior research and theories, the researchers offer up two hypotheses.

Children raised during periods of broader societal instability (i.e., when unemployement is high) as well as disconnection (when more parents are separated from each other), are more likely to espouse materialistic values, particularly if they experienced either during mid-childhood and early adolescence.

Exposure to advertising also seems to play a role, according to the researchers, particularly when children were tweens or in their early teen years.

Read the full story HERE.

Do you agree? Do you think kids today are worse than we were and that we are raising a generation of entitled kids?