Dear all,

I am happy to announce that the report Pew Report on Teens and Mobile phones is 
out. Amanda Lenhart, Scott Campbell, Kristen Purcell and I were the authors. 
Thanks to the folks at Pew and to the folks at the University of Michigan for 
their support and funding.

The big news is the rise in texting among US teens. The quick summary and the 
link to the report are below.

Rich L.

Daily text messaging among American teens has shot up in the past 18 months 
from 38% of teens texting friends daily in February of 2008, to 54% of teens 
texting daily in September 2009. And its not just frequency - teens are sending 
enormous quantities of text messages a day. Half of teens send 50 or more text 
messages a day, or 1,500 texts a month and one in three send more than 100 
texts a day, or more than 3,000 texts a month. Older teen girls ages 14-17 lead 
the charge on text messaging, averaging 100 messages a day for the entire 
cohort. The youngest teen boys are the most resistant to texting - averaging 20 
messages per day.

Text messaging has become the primary way that teens reach their friends, 
surpassing face-to-face, email, instant messaging and voice calling as the 
go-to daily communication tool for this age group. However, voice calling is 
still the preferred mode for reach parents for most teens.

ABOUT THE SURVEY

This study is based on the 2009 Parent-Teen Cell Phone Survey which obtained 
telephone interviews with a nationally representative sample of 800 teens age 
12-to-17 years-old and their parents living in the continental United States 
and on 9 focus groups conducted in 4 U.S. cities in June and October 2009 with 
teens between the ages of 12 and 18. The survey was conducted by Princeton 
Survey Research Associates International. The interviews were done in English 
by Princeton Data Source, LLC from June 26 to September 24, 2009. Statistical 
results are weighted to correct known demographic discrepancies.

http://www.pewinternet.org/Reports/2010/Teens-and-Mobile-Phones.aspx


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