The Internet and social networking websites have made it a lot easier for teens to cloister themselves, former Cooperstown High School Principal Gary Kuch said recently.
While speaking to Kuch about the underground world of teenagers, he said school administrators and teachers have always grappled with deciphering the slang teenagers use and their youth culture.
But teenagers with their own computers can now shut the doors of their rooms at night and continue to participate in their “underground” world, he said.
This comes with a risk, Kuch said.
“It seems there is less of a responsibility about what is said on the Internet than face-to-face,” said Kuch, who is now the superintendent of Worcester Central School.
The Internet also affords anonymity that can sometimes be abused, he said.
My conversation with Kuch led me to a recent study by the Pew Internet and American Life Project. The study suggests text messaging on mobile phones has become the No.1 communication tool of teens _ surpassing social networking websites, instant messaging, phone calls and face-to-face conversations.
A third of children between the ages of 12 and 17 send more than 100 text messages a day and half send more than 50, according to the study.
And there has been a big change just in the last two years, with 54 percent of teens texting at least once a day in September 2009, compared to 38 percent in 2008, the study found.
There is another interesting finding in the study _ 87 percent of teens who text sleep with their phones or next to them.
About a quarter of the teens surveyed reported they had been bullied or harassed through text messaging or cell phone calls.
Although Jill Mattice was a runner, she wasn’t always able to race in The Pit Run, her friend Kyle Breier said recently.
Breier, who is helping to organize the Trooper Jill E. Mattice Memorial HOPE Run on May 16, said Mattice worked on the state police detail on The Pit Run route in recent years.
Mattice died Jan. 20 when her patrol car collided with a tractor trailer on state Route 23 in Morris as she drove back to Oneonta from Unadilla Valley Central School.
Mattice enjoyed her job as school resource officer, Breier said.
“She absolutely loved working with the kids,” Breier said.
Lorey Biesheuvel, who is also helping to organize the run, said one of their eventual goals is to hold events in Mattice’s memory that are geared toward children.
While working on stories, not every source returns phone calls or e-mails before deadline.
I received an e-mail from Canadian Pacific Railway spokesman Mike Lovecchio after I had already turned in a story on the troubled Pony Farm Road bridge in the town of Oneonta. It was waiting for me in my inbox the next day.
The dilapidated bridge, which spans Canadian Pacific tracks, is owned by the railway, which has pledged money to fix it. But cost estimates of the project were too low, and available funds are not enough for the job, leaving the Oneonta Town Board with a quandary.
Lovecchio’s statement on the situation, which also includes a bridge in East Worcester, follows: “CP has spent more than $400,000 in engineering on the new bridge(s) and committed almost $600,000 towards the construction. We have done our part and lived up to our commitment.”
Reporter's Notebook
Reporter's Notebook: Teens live in their own online world
- Reporter's Notebook
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New website highlights all Schoharie offers
ABC Creative Group recently refreshed Schoharie County's tourism website, www.upstatevacations.com, with cutting-edge and mobile-friendly updates. The Schoharie County Planning and Development domain directs tourists to numerous destinations in the county, inviting them to find "Something Unexpected," according to a media release.
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Teachers say Afton boy was funny, smart
Craig A. Gohl was an ``amazing storyteller,'' who had ``a lot to offer the world,'' an administrator at Afton Central School said Thursday.
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Bike-track foes gird for battle
Neighbors opposed to the New York Safety Track -- a motorcycle training facility set to open next month in Delaware County -- say they aren't giving up without a fight.
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New direction for land-grant education
Among those in Albany earlier this month to celebrate the Cornell land-grant legacy at the state Department of Education was the 4-H FIRST Robotics team from Otsego County, according to a media release.
Continued ... - Tourism agency trying to spread knowledge
- Mar 30, 2013
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Missing woman case was cracked by sawmill owner
Some owners of rural tracts of land visit their property only infrequently. Richard Hayner of the Chenango County town of Plymouth is not among them.
Continued ... - Mar 23, 2013
- DEP newsletter is filled with useful tidbits
- Mar 16, 2013
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Database portal a nice effort, but has flaws
The new Open NY website is, on its face, a terrific idea: Take as many databases as possible and establish a single web portal for them.
Continued ... - Mar 9, 2013
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Appraisal proves area woman made smart purchase
B.L. of Oneonta said in the March issue of Country Living magazine that she spent $500 for a little chest of drawers at an antiques show.
Continued ... - Mar 3, 2013
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Chenango TV report misses key attribution
My late father’s birthday came and went the other day, which got me to thinking about how much I see the world through his eyes, and not because I attempt to do so.
Continued ... - Feb 23, 2013
- A lot on tap for Unadilla Valley's 10th anniversary
- Feb 16, 2013
- English farmersgoing it aloneon broadband
- Feb 9, 2013
- Taking a closer look at mayor's numbers
- Feb 2, 2013
- Trepidation flows through pipeline that exists only on maps
- Jan 26, 2013
- Cuomo's budget could be worse, officials say
- Jan 19, 2013
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Invaders are no strangers to our area
Most people, when they think of invasive species these days, probably think of Burmese pythons slithering wild in the Florida Everglades.
Continued ... - Jan 5, 2013
- New Year bringsnew maneuversfor old disputes
- Dec 29, 2012
- Christmas feast is a gracious gift to Stamford
- Dec 22, 2012
- Development funding is a complex process
- Dec 8, 2012
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Senate Dems'Albany loss isSeward's gain
The newly-minted "bipartisan governing coalition" calling the shots in the New York State Senate is the latest machination to hatch in Albany, though hardly the most shocking.
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New website highlights all Schoharie offers



