They're called Gen Z, and they've been described as "computerized locals" who've been "presented to a ton and they've been presented to a ton and they're growing up rapidly."
But they're also "super-associated, capricious, profoundly essential, fat children," writes Farhad Manjoo in Slate.
So what can we do to keep them healthy and active? "For what might we at any point keep our children sound?" he asks.
"Well, what reason would we say we are attempting the very techniques that have been bombing past ages' Cal-counting? Wellbeing class? Baseball? The response may be idyllically straightforward: Don't exhaust."
One of the things Gen Z has in common with previous generations: They've been introduced to technology.
"No matter what, they've been presented to a ton and they've been presented to a place in their lives," Manjoo writes.
"Today, kids figure out how to team up through Google Docs at an age when I was learning cursive....
And for this progression, a portion of this age's greatest issues appear to be so fundamental (sustenance and wellness) and the arrangements so straightforward (diet and...
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