Generation Z is one name used for the cohort of people born after the
Millennial Generation. There is no agreement on the exact dates of the generation with some sources starting it at the mid or late
1990s or from the mid
2000s to the present day.
USA Today sponsored an online contest for readers to choose the name of the next generation after the Millennials
. In the article,
Bruce Horovitz wrote that some might call the term "Generation Z" rather "off-putting" and a name that is "still in-the-running" for the next generation. The article proposed some alternate names including: iGeneration, Gen Tech, Gen Wii, Net Gen,
Digital Natives, Gen
Next,
Post Gen.
In
2013, Jeanine Poggi reported in
Ad Age that
Nickelodeon channel is looking to serve a new breed of kids born after
2005 whom it dubs "post-millennials".[2]
"
Scholars Generation" was proposed by a writer at A
Time to Succeed coalition who "works to ensure that all children in the nation’s high-poverty communities have better learning time in school".[4]
Authors
William Strauss and Neil Howe wrote several popular books on the subject of generations. They're widely credited with coining the term Millennials.[1]
Howe has said "No one knows who will name the next generation after the Millennials".[1] His company sponsored a website contest in 2005, and people voted overwhelmingly for the
Homeland Generation. That was not long after the
September 11th terrorist attacks, and one fallout of the disaster was that
Americans may have felt more safe staying at home.[1][5]
Strauss and Howe wrote that the Homeland Generation are people born from the year 2005 to the present day.
Plurals is a name coined by marketing firm
Frank N. Magid
Associates.[1]
Pew Research Center sponsored a contest to name the next generation after the Millennials.
Names proposed include: the TwoKays or 2K's (born after
2000), the
Conflict Generation (the generation that grew up during the time of the
Iraq War and
War in Afghanistan), Generation i (or iGeners and iGens), @generation, the Swipe Generation, the Tweennials, and Screeners.
Many members of this generation are highly connected, having had lifelong use of communication and media technology like the
World Wide Web, instant messaging, text messaging,
MP3 players, and mobile phones,[7] earning them the nickname "digital natives".[8]
According to marketing firm
Frank Magid Associates, the name "Plurals" reflects that they are the most diverse of any generation in the
U.S.; Magid estimates that 55% are
Caucasian, 24% are
Hispanic, 14% are African-American, 4% are
Asian, and 4% are mixed race or other. A Magid whitepaper stated that Plurals exhibit positive feelings about the increasing ethnic diversity in the
U.S.,[9] and they are more likely than older generations to have social circles that include people from different ethnic groups, races and religions.[10] According to Magid, Plurals are "the least likely to believe that there is such a thing as the
American Dream," while
Boomers and their Millennial children are "more likely to believe it".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generation_Z
- published: 18 Oct 2014
- views: 294