Studies show that people today are increasingly unlike people in the past. Conclusion: The world is going to hell in a hand basket.
Today we have information shot at us from a fire hose 24/7. Young people are growing up in this environment and crafting new ways of finding, sifting, and analyzing information. Those of us from previous generations can only catch glimpses really of this immersive world. And we see it and we cluck "Hmph! Kids today!"
Too much of this discussion has been about young people as consumers of digital culture, but it behooves us to notice that they are actually the primary producers of digital culture as well. The mixes and mashups and coding of the under-30 generation is an astonishing burst of human creativity. And making this stuff is hard. Making a few minutes of video, with images and sounds from dozens of different sources, requires a long and concentrated effort, a level of technical skill, and a broad cultural literacy to make the right choices.
This is coming from a 25 year old who is currently building a Web site at work, reading CHE, and eating lunch: this is a fine point, that the consumers of digital culture don't seem to get much credit for also being producers of it. And certainly producing this stuff does require considerable skill and concentration. Yes, we're making it. But two things:
1) For those of us doing what I'm doing now at my job, we don't exactly have much control over or access to the means of production. They tell me to make a Web site, or make a Web site better, and I do it for money. I try to make it usable, so I suppose this requires some cultural literacy; but otherwise, chances are, I'm making a Web site for someone else's agenda, and adding more junk to the fire. Concentraion and skill go in in a very localized sense, and what comes out is a digital medium that contributes toward the erosion concentration on a larger scale. Plus, I'm pretty bound up in the marketing process, and I don't have much creative agency.
2) For so many of those who are creating blogs or independent media productions, and who thereby have more creative agency, I find that the T.S. Eliot issue applies: people are ready to sound off and hurl more stuff into the atmosphere, but they're not as culturally literate as one should be to broadcast 'expert opinon' to the world.