Teen Boys and Girls Agree on What Is Most Important in Life



How do the experiences of teen boys and girls differ? That question motivated a survey of U.S. teens between the ages of 13 and 17 by the Pew Research Center. The findings, recently released, revealed a number of ways that the boys and girls differed. For example, girls said they feel more pressure to look good and fit in socially, whereas boys feel more pressure to be physically strong and good at sports. With regard to one of the most fundamental questions, though, the teen boys and girls agreed.

What Teens Want Out of Adult Life

Asked what was important to them as they looked ahead to when they would be adults, neither marriage nor children were rated as particularly important. Instead, what teens wanted most in their adult lives was having a job or career they enjoy: 86% said that was either very important or extremely important.

Percentage of teens who found each of the following to be very important or extremely important:

  • 86: Having a job or career they enjoy
  • 69: Having close friends
  • 58: Having a lot of money
  • 36: Getting married
  • 30: Having children
  • 6: Becoming famous

The only hint of a difference between the girls and the boys was that girls were more likely than boys to say that having close friends was important, 74% to 65%. But that was still the second priority for both, after enjoyable work.

What Adults See as Important to a Fulfilling Life

Perhaps you are thinking: Well, they’re kids. Their priorities will change. However, the Pew Research Center asked adults a similar set of questions in 2023 (excluding the one about becoming famous) and found very similar results. Asked to indicate the importance of five factors in order to have a fulfilling life, having an enjoyable job or career and having close friends topped the list once again. Being married came in last.

Percentage of adults who found each of the following important to living a fulfilling life:

  • 71: Having a job or career they enjoy
  • 61: Having close friends
  • 26: Having children
  • 24: Having a lot of money
  • 23: Being married

What This Says About Declining Marriage Rates

For the last half-century in the U.S., the number and percentage of adults who are married has consistently declined. Living single is on the rise.

Speculations about the causes of these trends (also evident in many other countries) often point to barriers to heterosexual marriage, such as a mismatch between what women and men are looking for in a spouse and what they are finding. Those kinds of explanations assume that people want to marry and if they are not married, it is because they could not find a suitable partner.

The findings about adults’ and teenagers’ beliefs about the good life suggest something different: Maybe marriage just isn’t that important. And maybe single life is more fulfilling than our conventional wisdom has long suggested. In another Pew survey, single adults who had said they were not interested in a romantic relationship were asked why not. The answer endorsed by the greatest number—72%—was that they just liked being single. In my own research, I found that the single at heart are powerfully drawn to single life. This is more than just liking being single. They are happy and flourishing because they are single, not in spite of it. The risk to them is not what they would lose if they did not organize their lives around a romantic partner, but what they would lose if they did.


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