New UNESCO Report Warns on Social Media’s Detrimental Effect on Girls

New UNESCO Report Warns on Social Media's Detrimental Effect on Girls

Social media has brought many positives into people’s lives, such as improving communication, creating new commerce routes, and increasing access to information. However, amongst all the benefits are some negatives, including the invasion of users’ privacy, distraction, and cyberbullying. A UNESCO report titled ‘Technology on Her Terms’ sheds light on how the platforms are amplifying gender stereotypes and impacting girls’ well-being, learning, and career choices.

“Children’s social lives are increasingly playing out on social media. But all too often, algorithm-driven platforms amplify exposure to negative gender norms,” said Audrey Azoulay, Director-General of UNESCO. “Ethical considerations must be taken into account in the design of these platforms. Social media should not confine women and girls to roles that limit their educational and career aspirations.”

The type of person young girl's wrongly aspire to be

Social Media Negatively Affects Well-being and Reinforces Gender Stereotypes
UNESCO’s ‘Technology on Her Terms’ report warns that algorithm-driven, image-based content, especially on social media, can expose girls to material ranging from sexual content to videos that glorify unhealthy behaviours or unrealistic body standards. This exposure can have particularly detrimental effects on girls’ self-esteem and body image. In turn, this impacts girls’ mental health and well-being, which are essential for academic success.

A young girl deep in thought sat on her bed

The UNESCO report cites Facebook’s research, which found that 32% of teenage girls said that when they felt bad about their bodies, Instagram made them feel worse. It also underlines the addictive design of TikTok, characterised by short, engaging videos.

This instant-gratification model may affect attention spans and learning habits, making sustained concentration on educational and extracurricular tasks more challenging.

Girls also suffer more cyberbullying than boys. On average, across OECD countries with available data, 12% of 15-year-old girls reported having been cyberbullied, compared to 8% of boys.

This situation is compounded by the rise of image-based sexual content, AI-generated deepfakes and ‘self-generated’ sexual imagery circulating online and in classrooms. Female students in several countries interviewed for the report said that they were exposed to pictures or videos they did not want to see.

The results demonstrate the importance of greater investment in education—including media and information literacy—and smarter regulation of digital platforms. This is in line with UNESCO’s Guidelines for the Governance of Digital Platforms, which was launched in November last year.

Negative Gender Stereotypes Dampen Girls STEM Aspirations
All these factors create a feedback loop in which girls are exposed to negative gender norms that are amplified by social media, are steered away from studying science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) subjects that are considered male-oriented fields and are deprived of the opportunity to shape the very tools that expose them to these stereotypes.

According to UNESCO data, women make up only 35% of tertiary STEM graduates worldwide, a figure that has not changed in the past 10 years. The report shows that persistent biases deter women from pursuing STEM careers, ultimately resulting in a lack of women in the technology workforce.

Women hold less than 25% of science, engineering, information and communication technologies jobs. They constitute only 26% of employees in data and artificial intelligence, 15% in engineering, and 12% in cloud computing across the world’s leading economies. Only 17% of patent applications are filed by women globally.

Evidence shows that men are leading the digital transformation. Although 68% of countries have policies in place to support STEM education, only half of these policies specifically support girls and women. Policy efforts should seek to promote role models, including on social media, to encourage career choices in STEM among young women.

Improving girls’ access to STEM studies is key to ensuring that women participate on equal terms in the digital transformation of our societies and supporting the design of truly inclusive technologies.

A happy girl using her mobile phoneNew UNESCO Report Warns on Social Media's Detrimental Effect on Girls 2

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