Jonathan Haidt’s Claims On Kids & Tech Crumble Under Scrutiny From Top Expert, Candice Odgers

from the look-at-the-actual-evidence-folks dept

Jonathan Haidt’s incredibly well-timed decision to surf on the wave of a moral panic about kids and social media has made him a false hero for many parents and educators. In my review, I noted that his book, “The Anxious Generation,” is written in a way that makes adults struggling with the world today feel good, because it gives them something to blame for lots of really difficult things happening with kids today.

The fact that it’s wrong and the data don’t support the actual claims is of no matter. It feels like it could be right, and that’s much easier than doing the real and extremely difficult work of actually preparing kids for the modern world.

So what happens when an actual expert confronts Haidt on this?

Earlier this year, we had Dr. Candice Odgers on our podcast. Unlike Haidt, she is an actual expert in this field and has been doing research on the issue for years. The podcast was mostly to talk about what the research actually shows, rather than just “playing off Haidt’s” misleading book. However, Odgers has become the go-to responder to Haidt’s misleading moral panic. She’s great at it (though there are a ton of other experts in the field who also point out that Haidt’s claims are not supported by evidence).

Still, Odgers keeps getting called on by publications to respond to Haidt’s claims. She’s done so in Nature, where she highlighted what the research actually shows, and in The Atlantic, where she explained how Haidt’s supported proposals might actually cause real harm to kids.

Many people have been wondering if Haidt and Odgers (who were at UVA at the same, Odgers as a grad student, Haidt as a professor) would have a chance to debate directly, and that finally happened recently during a session hosted by UVA. This gave them a chance to discuss what the research says directly. I recommend watching the whole discussion, which is an hour and a half long, though most of the discussion on the research comes in the first half.

What came across to me, and which Haidt admits at the very end, is that Odgers knows the research in this space better than anyone, and she wasn’t going to let Haidt get away with making broad generalizations not supported by the data. Here’s a snippet of her responding to Haidt insisting that the research supports his position, including that he was seeing the same thing across the Western world. But Odgers points out that’s not what the research shows:

Jon, I’m going to actually I’m going to follow up. So there’s a 2023 Lancet paper that came out. And all of the analyses there’s tremendous variability like you know in terms of mental health across countries. But if you both look at symptoms and you look at suicide, there’s been a general trend for declining rates across all European countries in Canada, Australia. You can pick out certain measures and certain time periods where there might be an increase, but I’ve always been curious of how these cross-country comparisons. So how that becomes evidence that this is somehow causing? Or if we see different trends and different countries at different times, that that creates the story? So… I don’t see what you’re seeing.

She also suggests that Haidt’s problem is that he has a story and then went back searching for data to support it. Rather than going in and seeing what the data actually says:

The cross-country comparisons, you know, they’re they’re often a starting point to see whether there might be something interesting correlationally going on, but it’s a very slippery place to start and I think you know, unless you start with the pretty clear hypothesis about what should explain those differences, if you’re just looking at trend lines and then going backwards and starting to fill in an explanation, it’s hard to follow where it goes and whether or not we’re just fitting these lines to our existing theories, but I’ll leave it.

Haidt jumps in to insist you don’t need a pre-existing hypothesis to find something. This is technically true because of course you can sometimes find something that way. But also, it is kind of a big deal right now, given the replication crisis which started in Haidt’s own field of psychology. The crisis was brought on by researchers hunting through data to try to prove something. This is why pre-registered studies are increasingly so important. So having Haidt just act like not having a hypothesis initially seems pretty tone deaf.

Similarly, I’ll note that Haidt frequently jumps between arguments that aren’t directly connected. When asked about evidence on mental health, he talks instead about things like sextortion and catfishing. Obviously, being a victim of those kinds of attacks and abuses can impact mental health, but that’s still a much smaller part of the issue and isn’t directly related to the larger issue of scrolling on social media and how it impacts mental health.

There’s a lot more in the discussion, but I’m really hoping that more people recognize that Haidt’s position doesn’t seem to really be supported by the evidence. Watching Odgers confront him is enlightening, but too few people will see it. Instead, politicians, parents, and school administrators are all acting as though Haidt has it all figured out. Mostly because it absolves them of having to do the hard work of teaching kids how to use these tools appropriately.

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Comments on “Jonathan Haidt’s Claims On Kids & Tech Crumble Under Scrutiny From Top Expert, Candice Odgers”

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That One Guy (profile) says:

First, determine the conclusion. Second, find supporting evidence.

if you’re just looking at trend lines and then going backwards and starting to fill in an explanation, it’s hard to follow where it goes and whether or not we’re just fitting these lines to our existing theories, but I’ll leave it.

And therein lies one of the core problems to the whole social media panic, it’s not based upon what the evidence shows, rather it’s based upon people starting from the conclusion of ‘Social media is bad’ and then working backward to find evidence to support that position, which is the exact opposite of good science.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Unfortunately I feel like the damage is already done within congress, and I’m not sure how we untangle that.

To be fair, the “damage” – if you can call it that – was already done before Haidt came into the picture. Governments, schools, CEOs and parents were all desperately looking for the right bogeyman to blame for all their kids’ woes. If it wasn’t Haidt, it would easily have been someone else, funded to come to the desired conclusions.

The closest we will come to untangling this is for more evidence to surface – like phone bans not actually making kids any happier, Instagram bans not actually making girls feel less body dysmorphic, and so on. But it won’t be soon, and this will likely not solve the issue, because of what Mike said – it is very unlikely that the general public will see Haidt come under scrutiny. Especially because established media will be only too happy to push narratives that shit on social media, which they have long since regarded as their competition.

Really, the only long-term solution might be for something else new and popular to appear, which parents can then vilify as the next big thing that’s killing their children and take the heat off of social media.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

As much as it feels that way sometimes, I don’t think killing the open Internet is likely. At least not the worst case scenario.

I don’t mean that in the way that FOSTA, KOSA and SOPA fans mock the younger generations for saying that their memes are getting taken away. I mean that the consequences of governments blindly listening to partisan lunatics for political clout are going to damage them far more than whatever supposed benefits they can glean. They’ll fuck over their own economies and societies much harder if they don’t exercise caution when adopting these sweeping policies.

And even in the worst countries that don’t have an open Internet, there are workarounds – consider the Great Firewall of China, or other countries where the governments attempt to clamp down on such access. I’m not saying that those scenarios don’t suck. I’m saying that eventually, the cows will come home and the idiots who pushed these initiatives through our societies will have to face the consequences. In the same way that the US, China, and all other major economies now have to grapple with mental health epidemics, lost productivity and innovation, and shrinking birth rates because they chose to pursue growth at all costs above citizen welfare – they’ll see how misguided their intentions and actions were.

I’m not saying I like it, or that we should roll over and admit defeat. But in the absence of effective action that would have led to lasting change, what younger generations have done is given up. Given up on marriage, home ownership, having kids, and so on. Enough of it has happened such that it’s made countries take notice – not necessarily with the right conclusions, and not necessarily without blaming the kids, but it is having an appreciable effect on policy nonetheless. Quiet, conscientious rebellion. Sending a message that the adults’ linear definition of how success and flourishing is defined simply isn’t universally applicable, or sustainable.

We’re not defeatist, but perhaps we are at the acceptance phase of grief.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3

Yeah. I find what they say to be a somber but understandable take.

I don’t doubt that some form of the internet will always survive, I never expected decentralization to happen for example, and yet here we have a steadily growing fediverse.

The hardest part is seeing through the clouds of anxiety, dread, apathy, etc. Because when you always feel like things are going wrong, you’ll struggle a lot with believing anything going well will matter in the long run.

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Anonymous Coward says:

As someone who learned to spell playing Quest for Glory and grew up in the era of the internet, I have advice for all the parents concerned about this issue for their kids.

Stop relying on technology to babysit your bratlings and interact with them.

Just because your parents did it to you doesn’t make it the best decision for you or your kids. Just the most convenient and comfortable.

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Mr. Blond says:

When video games were the bogeyman, the “experts” like Craig Anderson and Doug Gentile were repeatedly torn apart by people like Christopher Ferguson and Henry Jenkins. Unfortunately, that didn’t stop politicians from doubling down on their research as rationale for passing unconstitutional laws that were later struck down.

Anonymous Coward says:

I usually like Jon Haidt when he’s talked about the subject matter of “The Righteous Mind” or “The Coddling of the American Mind” but his latest book is trying too hard to prove things about social media that just aren’t that substantiated.

Wish he’d go back to working on ironing out Moral Foundations Theory instead.

Anonymous Coward says:

Phone separation anxiety != social media harm

We are seeing in schools a fair amount of phone separation anxiety, where kids are distressed to be without their phones. But that seems to be less about social media and more about people they know – the broken expectations from friends and even parents that people should be accessible by phone/text at all times. For the most part, I see anecdotally that being able to reach out to a larger friend group based on interests instead of geography is positive.

Various disasters, and the lack of landline phones are as much a factor as anything else. The harms people are attributing to social media could just as easily correlate to climate change.

Establishing for our kids that they own phones and that phones don’t own them is I think critical.

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