Differences between ethnic groups between generations Gish Jen's "Who is Irish?" Is exploring ideas and beliefs about ethnic families of Chinese grandmothers. Grandma tells stories as if she is reviewing past events and thinking about how they will affect her life. At the beginning of her story, she thought that her granddaughter Sophie was a 3 year old wild child (161 years old). Perhaps her grandmother is related to Sophie's strong will. Because, as she said, "I worked hard and I was fierce" (161).
Examples of permanent differences between modern people are their ethnic and ethnic composition. Millennial generation is the most diverse adult. 57% are non-Hispanic whites, 21% are Hispanic, 13% are black and 6% are Asian. Every old generation is not very diverse. Non-Hispanic whites accounted for 61% of X generations, 72% of baby boomers and 78% of silent generations. In 2014, only 28% of the Millennial generation is married. This makes them very different from the quiet generation members of the same stage of their life: 64% silent is married when their members are between 18 and 33 years old. When their generation was between the ages of 18 and 33, about half (49%) of the baby-boomer generation and 38% of their generation were married. Generational analysis allows these comparative snapshots, but researchers can also track the age of these peers.
The X generation was reserved for 2 generations - the front baby-boomer generation and the millennium behind them are very different from each other. In most cases, we evaluate the generation, ie their ethnic and ethnic composition, their political, social and religious values, their economic and educational conditions, their technical use. A low suspension bridge between the giants. "The X generation is called" negligible generation "and is nicknamed between the larger baby-boomer generation and the shining Millennium generation, but its pioneers form and today also in our world It continues to influence. The definition varies from person to person, but the Pew Research Center has classified this generation as a person born between 1965 and 1980 and now there are more than 65 million people in the United States.
This caused my resonance. The digital divide of the United States and Zimbabwe is not as clear as Zimbabwe, but the use of the Internet is quite different in terms of socioeconomic, intergenerational, and ethnic differences. I know that many people in their 60s and 70s can access the Internet, but because they are part of their daily work, they prefer to read the newspaper. Some worker news consumers have limited data on cell phones and the possibility of playing videos on mobile phones and downloading news applications is decreasing. In rural and immigrant communities, many people rely on offline social networks mainly for news and information. What innovative distribution strategy can more effectively cover these audiences?