Y11W44WR Your teenage self, preserved forever
Examine your own digital history — what you have posted, shared, and left visible — and reflect on what it would tell an outsider about who you have been.
1Retrieval check
Q1.What does the research on digital permanence show?
- ADelete’ reliably removes content forever
- BSocial media content posted in adolescence persists and resurfaces for decades, affecting employment, relationships, and reputation
- COnly criminal content persists
- DScreenshots don’t matter
Q2.What is the article’s counter-thread against the ‘stay silent online’ response?
- APost anything you want
- BSome teenage online expression is healthy and formative; the solution isn’t silence but a developed sense of ‘would my 30-year-old self stand behind this?’
- CThe problem is overstated
- DOnly extroverts should post
Show answer key
Q1 → B. Social media content posted in adolescence persists and resurfaces for decades, affecting employment, relationships, and reputation.The adolescent brain, tuned for novelty and social reward, is particularly vulnerable to posting content that the future self will regret.
Q2 → B. Some teenage online expression is healthy and formative; the solution isn’t silence but a developed sense of ‘would my 30-year-old self stand behind this?’.The goal is calibrated expression, not self-erasure; practise the pause before posting emotionally-loaded content.
2Prompt deconstruction
- Command verb
- EXAMINE your own digital footprint — private reflection, not public audit
- Evidence source
- three or four specific artefacts or kinds of artefact from your own posting
- For each
- intended meaning vs. what an outsider would now infer
- Must end with
- a considered sense of what (if anything) you would change going forward
3Pick nudge
Which digital artefacts will you examine from an outsider’s view?
4Planner — for each of your picks
5Sentence stems
- I noticed that ___ when ___.
- The specific moment it stood out was ___.
- Before paying attention, I had been assuming ___.
- [Researcher’s] finding that ___ captures what I saw, because ___.
- The pattern across my cases is ___.
- What this tells me about [wider topic] is ___.
6Exemplar paragraph (not about this article)
(1) The clearest example of a post I still stand behind is the long note I wrote after a debating final in Year 10 — public, reflective, specific. (2) An outsider reading it would see an adolescent taking an experience seriously, and that is exactly what I intended. (3) The clearest example of a post I’ve changed on is a string of frustrated comments I left on a friend’s feed during a difficult term; what I meant was to be loyal and share anger, but an outsider reading the thread now would see someone speaking harshly about a teacher without context. (4) Before paying attention, I had been assuming ‘people who know me will know what I meant’; the research on digital permanence captures what I was missing — the audience won’t just be people who know me, and the context won’t travel. (5) The specific moment it stood out was when I searched my own name and read the thread as a stranger. (6) The pattern across my cases is that my posts land well when I treat the audience as including my thirty-year-old self, and badly when I treat the audience as only my current friends. What this tells me about my future posting is specific: when a post is emotional, write it, wait an hour, and ask whose voice it actually sounds like.
What this paragraph does, move by move
- Names a specific artefact that still holds up.
- Names a specific artefact that doesn’t.
- Observes the prior unexamined assumption.
- Uses the digital-permanence research as the frame.
- Describes the decisive moment of seeing it as an outsider.
- States the pattern and a specific rule going forward.
Private-reflection note: Analysis is the work; personal disclosure is not required.
- Choosing a selection results in a full page refresh.
- Opens in a new window.