The Real Difference Between Teenage Boys and Girls' Sexting Habits? Boys Forward More.
By Amanda Hess
Photo by Kevin Coombs/Reuters
It's not the sexting. It's the sexism.
It's not the sexting. It's the sexism.
Last month, law enforcement officers and school administrators
launched an effort to crack down on sexting in one Cincinnati-area high
school. Hundreds of students are suspected of distributing nude photos of their classmates via cellphones and the Internet. Just 10 girls will face discipline—the ones whose images have circulated most widely.
Officials may think they’re tracking the sexting problem to its root
by punishing the girls who snapped and sent the photos in the first
place. But they’re really just reinforcing the lopsided sexual standards
of the adolescent selfie market. In a typical American high school,
there are just as many guys posing for dick pics as there are girls
lifting their shirts. But once those photos hit the schoolwide
distribution system, girls’ photos travel further.
A new study, published in Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking, illuminates that dynamic. Researchers surveyed 1,000 black and Latino 10th
graders in a southeast Texas school district about their sexting
habits. Among black teens, 27 percent of girls and 23 percent of boys
said they had snapped a nude photo of themselves and passed it along.
Among Latino teens, 20 percent of boys and 17 percent of girls had done
the same. So selfies in this school district are split pretty evenly
along gender lines. And though this study focused on minority teens,
researchers said their sexting numbers lined up with rates recorded
among “white private high school students” as well as more diverse
groups of minors.
It’s in the distribution of these images that boys and girls’
behavior begins to diverge. When an explicit photograph hits their
phones, the teen boys in the study were almost twice as likely as the
teen girls to have forwarded it beyond its intended audience. And boys
were much more likely than girls to have received one of these errant
sexts from an oversharing peer.
That nonconsensual distribution could be fueling the perception that
teen girls are sexting more aggressively than boys. A 2009 Pew report on
sexting among American teens
didn’t register a statistical divide in sexting behaviors among boys
and girls, but it did record teenagers’ perceptions of a gender rift.
“This is common only for girls with ‘slut’ reputations. They do it to
attract attention,” one boy told Pew. “Sexting’s not common, but it does
happen because girls want everyone to know they ‘look good,’ ” said
another. And then there’s the female perspective: “If a guy wants to
hookup with you, he’ll send a pictures of his private parts or a naked
picture of him[self]. It happens about 10 times a month.”
When girls sext, they’re accused of publicizing their sexuality to attract attention; when boys do it, they’re assumed to be courting a sex partner (however ineffectively) one on one. That double standard persists even though, according to the study, boys were almost twice as likely as girls to publicly post their own nude photos online.
When girls sext, they’re accused of publicizing their sexuality to attract attention; when boys do it, they’re assumed to be courting a sex partner (however ineffectively) one on one. That double standard persists even though, according to the study, boys were almost twice as likely as girls to publicly post their own nude photos online.
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