69ý

Opinion
Student Well-Being Opinion

Generation Alpha Is Defined by Tragedy

Rising teens have direct digital access to unending pain, violence, and loss
By Bettina L. Love — February 06, 2025 | Corrected: February 12, 2025 3 min read
Digital art painting of girl looking at a glowing screen, acrylic on canvas texture, storytelling illustration
  • Save to favorites
  • Print
Email Copy URL

Corrected: This essay was updated to correct information about Sandra Bland’s death and the New Orleans terror attack.

My wife and I have twins born in 2010, members of the generation dubbed “Alpha” (born from 2010 to 2025). It’s the first generation to grow up fully immersed in and consumed by digital technology.

When our kids were just 2 years old, Trayvon Martin was killed by George Zimmerman for, as many believe, being Black. After Trayvon’s killing, I remember my wife and I looking at each other, silently acknowledging with our eyes, no words needed, that we could not keep our Black children safe in this country. It was a feeling that linked me to my ancestors in a way that moved generational trauma from abstraction to reality.

After Trayvon, there was Michael Brown (2014), Tamir Rice (2014), Freddie Gray (2015), Philando Castile (2016), Breonna Taylor (2020), George Floyd (2020), and Ma’Khia Bryant (2021)—all killed by police. Sandra Bland died in a jail cell after a minor traffic violation in 2015, and Robert Brooks was killed in 2024 by prison guards.

When our kids were 10 years old, we took them to protest the murders of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor. With tears in our eyes, we explained to our children how Black bodies are deemed violent and disposable in America.

Now, in our house, conversations concerning the killing of Black bodies by the police seem routine, almost expected. The everydayness of Black death, which kids can consume in the palm of their hands on many an app, underscores how ordinary tragedy feels in their lives. Watching my children grow up, I have come to realize they are constantly processing tragedies—Black death is just the beginning.

In our house, in between singing along to Billie Eilish, Beyoncé, Kendrick Lamar, and calculating how many times we can watch the musical “Wicked” in a weekend, there are ongoing conversations and heartbreak after each school shooting. During COVID, I remember holding my daughter as she cried in my arms missing her friends, yearning for social interaction as online school became emotionally too much to bear.

Some days, I am in awe when I remind myself that my kids lived through a pandemic that killed over 1 million people in the United States alone. I never thought I would have to explain to my kids what an insurrection is as we watched men and women filled with rage storm the U.S. Capitol. I find myself constantly checking in on my kids’ mental health as I read article after article about the rise of and how so many kids and young adults are

After extreme weather disasters, children are more likely to experience anxiety, depression, suicide, and post-traumatic stress disorder than adults.

I don’t have the words to answer questions about how someone could kill 14 people and injure many more in a homegrown terrorist attack like the recent one in New Orleans, but my son asked me about it anyway. I feel like I let them down with each storm, flood, and fire that I know is due to human-driven climate change and is only going to get worse as they become adults trying to breathe in a world we polluted. No one prepares you for how to talk to your kids about genocide, war, the possibility of police entering schools to deport children, the banning of books, and civil rights.

And, of course, one thing that brought Generation Alpha some semblance of joy—TikTok—could be banned. This is a generation of children consuming and consumed by tragedy with direct digital access to all the pain, despair, destruction, violence, and, ultimately, loss.

See Also

Girl on a swing shadow
Alex Linch/iStock/Getty

According to the American Psychiatric Association, after extreme weather disasters, children are to experience anxiety, depression, suicide, and post-traumatic stress disorder than adults. who experience the horrific tragedy of a school shooting are prescribed antidepressants at a higher rate, have increased student absenteeism, and are more likely to repeat a grade in the two years after a shooting. In 2018 and 2019 alone, over 100,000 children attended a school where a shooting took place. Our children are surrounded by tragedy inside and outside of school.

And so, as the adults in the room, we must recognize the harsh reality that Generation Alpha is in fact the Tragedy Generation. It brings me no pleasure to give such a label to my own children, but their unrelenting reality steadily marching toward a seemingly condemned future makes it so. And sadly, I see no reprieve in sight.

Related Tags:

A version of this article appeared in the February 19, 2025 edition of Education Week as Generation Alpha Is Defined by Tragedy

Events

This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Science Webinar
Making Science Stick: The Engaging Power of Hands-On Learning
How can you make science class the highlight of your students’ day while
achieving learning outcomes? Find out in this session.
Content provided by 
Teaching Profession Webinar Key Insights to Elevate and Inspire Today’s Teachers
Join this free half day virtual event to energize your teaching and cultivate a positive learning experience for students.
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Student Achievement Webinar
Student Success Strategies: Flexibility, Recovery & More
Join us for Student Success Strategies to explore flexibility, credit recovery & more. Learn how districts keep students on track.
Content provided by 

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.

Read Next

Student Well-Being 3 Tips for Building Independent Thinkers Who Can Manage Their Emotions
An educator and an expert discuss ways to strengthen students' social-emotional skills.
4 min read
Illustration of butterfly.
Anna Godeassi for Education Week
Student Well-Being 69ý Close as Flu and Other Respiratory Illnesses Spike
Some schools are temporarily closing to stop the spread of infection—or because too many staff are sick.
4 min read
Flu and cold season concept: student at desk with tissues and blowing their nose.
E+
Student Well-Being Q&A This School Counselor Has a Four-Legged Trick for Getting Tweens to Open Up
The 2025 School Counselor of the Year supports hundreds of middle schoolers with help from her therapy dog, Winston.
5 min read
Carmen Larson, 2025 School Counselor of the Year.
Carmen Larson, 2025 School Counselor of the Year.
Courtesy of the American School Counselor Association
Student Well-Being From Our Research Center Are 69ý Vaping More? Educators Think So
Teachers, principals, and district leaders are reporting an increase despite previous federal data showing teen vaping is declining.
3 min read