Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
About
Follow
My Account
Log in
View Account
Log out
Donate
Social & Demographic Trends
Menu
Research Areas
Home
U.S. Politics
Media & News
Social Trends
Religion
Internet & Tech
Science
Hispanics
Global
Publications
Topics
Interactives
Datasets
Experts
November 4, 2010
Once Again, The Future Ain’t What It Used to Be
Views on the Future of Today’s Children, by Religion and Church Attendance
Next
→
←
Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
Download
Views on the Future of Today’s Children, by Religion and Church Attendance
Embed
Report Materials
Complete Report PDF
Diet/Gambling/Movies Dataset
Full Report
Once Again, The Future Ain’t What It Used to Be
Report Infographics
In the 1990’s, Rising Optimism About the Next Generation
Most Parents Expect Their Children To Live Better Than Them–But More Now Have Doubts (chart)
Most Parents Expect Their Children To Live Better Than Them–But More Now Have Doubts (graphic)
Most Americans Say They Are Living Better Than Their Parents Did (chart)
Most Americans Say They Are Living Better Than Their Parents Did (graphic)
Quality of Life Correlates with Optimism About Childrens’ Future
Views on the Future of Today’s Children, by Party, Ideology and Region
Views on the Future of Today’s Children, by Religion and Church Attendance
Views on the Future of Today’s Children, by Immigrant Status
Views on the Future of Today’s Children, by Demographic Group
Which Groups Have Grown Less Optimistic About Children’s Future?
Declining Optimism About the Future of Today’s Children
Copyright 2018 Pew Research Center
About
Terms & Conditions
Privacy Policy
Reprints, Permissions & Use Policy
Feedback
Careers