Updated
Updated · NPR · Jun 15
University of Michigan Survey Finds Most Parents Track 18-25-Year-Old Children by Smartphone
Updated
Updated · NPR · Jun 15

University of Michigan Survey Finds Most Parents Track 18-25-Year-Old Children by Smartphone

3 articles · Updated · NPR · Jun 15

Summary

  • A new University of Michigan survey found that most parents monitor their 18- to 25-year-old children, including through “always on” smartphone location tracking.
  • The report focuses on how parents use technology to follow adult children’s whereabouts, testing how common continuous location sharing has become after age 18.
  • The findings spotlight a growing tension between parental oversight and independence for young adults in the 18-25 age group.

Insights

When a parent's digital safety net becomes a trap, who is it truly protecting?
What is the psychological cost for a generation that has never been truly alone?