Now - OCEA - Ontario Cooperative Education Association
Transcription
Now - OCEA - Ontario Cooperative Education Association
Now: 10 Things to Know about Young Canadians. Twice. Presented by: Max Valiquette, Youthography Hello, Ontario Co-Operative Education Association! about youthography • Founded in 2001, Youthography is Canada’s leading youth marketing consultancy • Youth market research, strategy and marketing • Plenty of research (quant and qual) – We put ‘youth at the epicenter’ • Marketing – ‘money where mouth is’ factor • We’re immature about me • I also host TVOntario’s “Vox Talk,” a youth-issues talk show • We film it, often in schools, – yay! – using youth panellists, with a young audience – cool! Contents 1. 10 things to know about Young Canadians 2. 10 things to know about Schools and the school to work transition 10 Things to Know About Young Canadians 1. the 4 x 5 factor • The 10-29 group divides into four equal five-year cohorts Age Male / Female (number) Male / Female (% of population) 10-14 2,104,800 6.6 15-19 2,145,800 6.6 20-24 2,243,300 7.0 25-29 2,194,300 6.8 TOTAL 10-29 8,688,200 27 2. Home Offers Less • 80% of them come from families with only 1-2 children at home – A greater reliance on friends • 60% of women work out of home – Coupled with single-parent households, it means that “3:30 to 5:30 is my chill time…it’s the time for me alone at home.” • 67% of unmarried 20-24-year-olds live at home – And yet, they are staying at home longer… Getting into Adulthood Earlier… • • • • • Average age of educational enrollment: <4 Average age of 1st menstruation: 10-11 (vs. 12+) Average age of 1st cigarette: 13 Average age of “school-type” decision: 14 Average age of 1st intercourse: <16 (vs. <18) …but Fully Getting There Later… • • • • Median age at graduation: 23 (vs 22) Average age at graduation: 26 (vs 24) Average age of 1st marriage: 29 (vs 25) Average age of 1st childbirth: 29 (vs 26) 3. …Equals Prolonged Pre-Adulthood 4. They Play Teenager, not Grownup <8 years Lipsmackers Firefly Wear a cause bracelet Get tutored 16 years> Lipstick / Foundation / Blush Cellphone Volunteer / Walk for the Cure Get tutored 5. And Can Share Trends 13 years All Video Games DIY - Scrapbooking Buying a Tim’s double-double Skate and Snow Boarding 29 years Networked Games DIY – Value Village Brewing specialty coffee Board Culture Brand Apparel 6. What They Value • • • • • • Relationships Communication Information Diversity Empowerment And what sews it all together…Technology what they value So, Technology is Changing… • Then (1980-1996): – Slow change in technology and entertainment – Traditional models of consuming, creating culture • Then to Now (1996-2005): – CD to MP3, DVD, Gaming Consoles, All-in-ones – Complete reversal in way culture is created, distributed • Now: – Huge speed of change is regular – Settling on new distribution models, sources of culture …and they Adopt it Quickly • Entertainment & Technology – BitTorrent Foreign Movies – Television on your cell phone – Pause Live TV; Movies-OnDemand – Video iPod: Watch “Lost” on the run – Web radio and Satellite radio – TV Series Released on DVD – Home Wireless Internet 7. …so it’s Transition there, also 2002 2004 Jan 2005 Sept 2005 8. They Integrate Cultural Elements Better than ever Before: Presenting Integration Culture integration culture: THEN separate elements = separate identities • Different elements developed, adopted and subscribed to by distinct sub-cultures or “tribes” • Hip hop culture, fetish culture, black culture, white suburban culture, gay culture, skateboard culture, jock culture etc… • You could see these at school… separate elements = separate identities diversity, change and experimentation • 80s: media expansion (radio formats, print, expanding channel universe) • 90s: media explosion (internet, 500 channels) • Increased immigration • …diversity, change and experimentation became the iconic elements of our culture – “tribal” elements cross-pollinate… • …and become less relevant as culture “blending” and “bending” became the norm diversity, change and experimentation integration culture: NOW “integration culture” • “Tribes” becoming increasingly peripheralized • Now: full-on integration of as many “cultures” into self-identity as wanted • Borders between “tribes” are losing relevance – they are bleeding successfully into each other • Cultural borders foreign to young Canadians • Mixing and mashing up their own identity “integration culture” “integration culture” examples • Mash-ups in music (hello “Hung Up” et al) • Your iPod list (“Everything but country!”) • Fashion mixing (hip hop, rock, new wave, techno and bohemian all living in one outfit) • Gender blending (beyond simple hetero / homo) • Ethnic blending (moving beyond black, white, red and yellow to wholly new racial blends) “integration culture” “integration culture” examples • Also reflects in consumer choices, as we no longer want one thing to do just one thing: young people are so media, consumer and brand literate that they look for multiple functions in one purchase – – – – – PSP and Treo (give me everything all in one device) Streaming media and networked games on your PC Food culture (Russian dim sum, foie gras hamburgers) Wraps and smoothies (all in one please) Cockapoos vs. pure breds (mixing is better) “integration culture” 9. They Live in a World Where “Vice” is a Part of our Normal Experience: Presenting Hedonormalization hedonormalization: THEN sex and drugs: negative or cloistered • Pre-1950s: mainstream Western culture didn’t really acknowledge human sexuality or drugs • Sexuality: controversial and “dirty,” nonmainstream sexuality was considered “deviant” • Recreational Drugs: linked to subterranean or criminal elements; or rebellion sex and drugs: negative and cloistered sex & drugs slowly seen as natural, human • Feminism, gay rights help push sex to mainstream • Notions of “deviancy” started to liberalize – Kinsey Report and The Joy of Sex read by regular folk • Sexual fulfillment becoming an important element of life (swinger culture, the perfect orgasm)… • …but people were still defining themselves by their sexual behaviours (“I’m a swinger,” “It’s the Summer of Love,” “Nobody knows I’m gay” t-shirts) • …and open, but only in a “safe” environment (key party, gay village, out-of-the-way sex shop) sex & drugs slowly seen as natural, human sex & drugs slowly seen as natural, human • Recreational drug use: slowly more accepted • Marijuana and cocaine, in particular, became common to reference in popular culture • Pop cultural permission (and evolved production and marketing) make these drugs easier to get • Ecstasy also rises in popularity: a drug with a community – people want to talk about it • …but still defined by their drugs (“He’s a stoner,” “I’m a raver”) or taking it outside (“We’ll go puff one out back”) sex and drugs slowly seen as natural, human hedonormalization: NOW “hedonormalization” • Now we (young people especially) see sex and drugs as common and expected • Both in pop culture and personal experience • Younger parents / caregivers increasingly permissive – Boomers got around quite a bit in the 70s and 80s; Reefer Madness was a myth “hedonormalization” • AIDS awareness promoting acknowledgement of youth sexual activity and safe sex practices • Focus on personal satisfaction from sex • Internet has made pornography access almost ubiquitous and much more private… • …but also allowed us to share it “hedonormalization” • “War on drugs” being seen increasingly as wrong strategy • Medical community linking marijuana with some health benefits (leads to “medicinal marijuana”) • Pharma-culture becoming more pervasive; more permissive socio-cultural attitudes regarding drug use in general (Paxil, Viagra, Cialis, Zyban) “hedonormalization” • Exploding influences, information, standards have created a larger culture of general permissiveness • Only minimal organized censorship of ideas or content currently exists • We talk about sex, and sexuality in a very open and frank way (in culture, at the water cooler, in lots of advertising)… • …and no one really cares if you light up a joint • Oh! And don’t forget gambling! “hedonormalization” examples • Sex and sexuality on mainstream TV (Sex and the City, The O.C., Desperate Housewives, The L Word) • Graphic sex advice as standard as “Dear Abby” (Savage Love, Love Bites, Sex With Sue, Sex TV) • “Hook up” culture (Lava Life, HurryDate, Ashley Madison) • Sexual aids now seen as standard personal appliances • Male magazines (Maxim, FHM, Stuff) • Rise of burlesque and stripper athletics • Booty shaking in hip hop culture • Rise of homemade pornography • The totally inappropriate e-mail you send to everyone “hedonormalization” “hedonormalization” examples • Canadian Addiction Survey: 70 per cent of us will have smoked a joint at some point • Potential marijuana decriminalization; policing less stringent • Quasi-legal toke bars in Vancouver and Toronto • Safe shooting sites in Vancouver, proposed for Toronto • Major celebrities openly discuss their marijuana proclivities • Rise of coke culture (again) • Canada: 40,000 people every weekend at clubs that don’t serve alcohol and are open ‘til 10am • NOTE: Permissiveness still mostly focused on marijuana; however leads to culture of permissivity across the board – and let’s see what happens with this new government “hedonormalization” examples Hedonormalization: So what? • Maclean’s: “Pass the Weed, Dad.” (November ’05) • “if I am drunk, I can call my parents for a ride home, no questions asked.” • “My parents bought me condoms.” • “My parents aren’t at home a lot...” 10. So if everything else is changing, aren’t schools changing also? • We view schools as venerable and long-standing • Which is true, as an institution, but schools have needed to change over the past decade or so… • …to respond to changing youth culture and trends • Internet, personal safety, job competitiveness, workplace demands, a decline in trades…let’s explore some of what we are seeing… 10 Things to Know About Schools and the School-toWork Transition 1. Teachers: Providers to Facilitators • Teachers no longer control content • Always something newer out there • Need to know what is right and what isn’t 2. Internet: the Dominant Force • The “self-directed” student • Global Learning – MIT offering free courses on-line to people across the globe just to harness their brainpower • Handing in a digital copy for convenience… • …or for plagiarism • “I start all of my research with Google.” 3. School Competes with the ‘Net, Too • Chatting while doing homework • Texting in class – “I used the calculator on my phone, but would also text friends for answers” • Part of a larger intrusive force that the Internet is exerting on all parts of youth culture: it’s almost impossible to separate it out now 4. School is no Longer a Social Hub • Technology facilitates having friends all over – “I can text my friends whenever I want to” – “I use 10-4 and I can Walkie-Talkie someone across the country for free” • Also larger age gaps at Colleges and Universities – everyone at school might not be “just like you” 5. Pressure to Decide on Direction Earlier • Direction increasingly includes post-secondary • “In Grade 9, you pretty much have to know whether or not you want to do Arts or math and Science – it’s crazy.” • Part of the prolonged pre-adult lifestage • “We all feel like we have to go to University” • “If I don’t get to College, at least, what do I do?” 6. Pressure to Work Starts Earlier • Allowance at an all-time low: work for pay more important • Wanting more disposable income: means taking more time to finish (with part-time work) • Also, means a greater pressure to have some sort of workplace skills for some, ASAP Work and School Simply rate each of the following concepts, ideas or values in terms of their importance to YOUR LIFE n=1480 Internal National Study / Spring 2004 / 1329 year old Top Box Results Total 13-17 18-22 23-29 Developing new skills 90.9% 86.9% 91% 94.8% Getting formally educated 88.9% 81.7% 90.6% 84.9% Finding things for yourself 84% 79.7% 84.2% 87.8% Having a lifelong career 82.8% 88.3% 87.7% 80.2% Being informed - current events 65.6% 61.1% 64% 73.8% Being street smart 58.4% 61.4% 58.9% 54.1% Starting a business 32.2% 30.6% 31.7% 34.2% Work and School • Formal education is seen as being most important for 18-22 year olds – the age where people are most likely to be in it • High school students: least likely to get importance of formal education or new skills… • …but like every other demo, place more importance on skills than a formal education… • …which increasingly means white collar skills (even with a blue collar mentality) 7. Move to Colleges, Universities • Emphasis on “skills” for many; particularly relevant in an era of communications (not trade skills) • Close to 80% HS graduation rate: increase is from people who go on to Colleges • Trades are being squeezed out: the death of the blue collar worker – Gov’t: $12 Million ad campaign – Parents: “I didn’t work 25 years in trades so you would!” University Enrolment 1997/98 to 2003/04 2003/2004 % change Actual change Total 990,400 20.4 167,600 Full Time 735,600 28.4 162,500 Part Time 254,800 2.0 5,100 Undergraduate 776,900 22.7 143,900 Graduate 142,800 26.7 30,100 Statistics Canada, 2005 Enrolment • Total post-secondary enrolment – Universities, Colleges and Trade Schools – is somewhere north of 1.6 million Canadians • In 2002, about 2/3 of young Canadians aged 1824 had taken some sort of post-secondary • Approximately 300,000 students graduating post-secondary education per year 8. School is More Expensive • Not just the cost of tuition (although, wow) • Living expenses • Computers and Internet access Tuition Costs • Average tuition increased over 135% over 10 years • Average tuition in 2003 was $4,025 nationally Increase 1990-2000 Quebec Central East West 0 1000 2000 3000 Tuition Costs 4000 5000 School Debt • About half of college and university grads left school owing money for their education, mostly from government student loan programs • 1/7 university graduates owes 25K or more in government student loans upon graduating • More are working part-time and taking longer to graduate 9. Schools are More of a Business • More expensive (means greater expectations) • Marketed as businesses are (the school as brand) • Elements surrounding schools – scholarship or research websites; oncampus businesses, etc – greater than ever before Marketing in Schools Which of the following statements is closest to your opinion of marketing in schools, colleges or universities? 2000 % 2002 % No marketing, period 17 26 Special circumstances/ company gives back 72 64 Marketing is perfectly fine 11 10 10. So Schools Need to Learn to Change • A time of great transition and change • But part of a larger cycle of change • Schools need to adapt to changing needs of students • Technology is critical (but expensive, I know) • Ask your most forward-thinking students where they see things going… • …as the barriers between urban and rural continue to break • A regular symposium with students? Thanks! Questions? Comments?