Traditionalists Traditionalists (also called the Silent Generation) were born between the turn of XX century and the end of World War II. Historical and societal events that shaped this generation include World War I and World War II, the Roaring Twenties, the Great Depression, the Korean War and the G1Bill, which shaped their God-fearing, hardworking and patriotic character (Lancaster & Stillman, 2002). „They became America’s leading civil-rights activists, rock and rollers, antiwar leaders, feminists, public-interest lawyers, and mentors for young firebrands” (Howe and Strauss, 2000). The values that describe this generation are “dedication and sacrifice, hard work, conformity, law and order, respect for authority, duty before pleasure, …show more content…
(2000), this generation was born between 1946 through 1964. They have experienced many notable events - war in Vietnam, Watergate, the women’s and human rights movements, recession, and the most influential one - the invention of the television (Lancaster & Stillman, 2002). It attracted them to the culture-related professions, such as teaching, religion, journalism, marketing, and the arts (Howe and Strauss, 2000). The key word for Boomers is optimistic. They grew up in a world full of opportunities - the postwar economy was booming with the availability of jobs, GI loans, production of goods, and a good education for all (Lancaster & Stillman, 2002). They "grew up as indulged youth during an era of community-spirited progress” (Howe and Strauss, 2000), but had to compete for nearly everything against their peers, what gave them a label “Me Generation” (Lancaster & Stillman, 2002). Generation X Members of this generation were raised during the boom of technology. Their childhood was revolutionized by the inventions of different media, with personal computer as the most life-changing one (Lancaster & Stillman, 2002). They grew up in the world full of violence - the sexual revolution, the rise in divorce, an R-rated popular culture, crime, teen pregnancy (Howe and Strauss, 2000), AIDS, crack cocaine, child molesters and drunk drivers (Lancaster & Stillman,