Scientific American [...] today’s adolescents seem to want more in the way of worldly
goods than did teens 30 years ago, and they don’t really want to work
for it.
That’s according to a study published in the Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin. [Jean M. Twenge and Tim Kasser, Generational
Changes in Materialism and Work Centrality, 1976-2007: Associations
With Temporal Changes in Societal Insecurity and Materialistic Role
Modeling]
"Interested" and "than".
ReplyDeleteTeens should really taught valuable lessons on how important immaterial things are.
ReplyDelete