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Screens aren’t completely bad

- KATHERINE REYNOLDS LEWIS

Expert: Parents should be realistic about limits they set for their children

It’s a subject that has been dominating the headlines neary every week. How much screen time is good for children? In her new book, The Art of Screen Time, Anya Kamenetz, lead digital education reporter with America’s National Public Radio, tackles this issue in a new way. In fact, she offers some alternativ­e considerat­ions having taken into view the latest research about the impact of screens on kids’ well-being.

Kamanetz makes the case that rather than viewing technology as a boogeyman that will doom our children, parents should be clear-eyed and realistic about the limits they set — and even enjoy screens alongside their offspring.

She offers her perspectiv­e on a series of concerns:

Parents have been so inundated with warnings that screens are toxic and evil. Your book takes a different tack. What are the main messages?

TV is not radon gas. It’s not an invisible, silent killer in your home where suddenly you’ll be tested and find the kid’s future has been destroyed. It’s definitely an environmen­tal factor, but it has observable effects. You need to make decisions about its use based on those effects.

Parents say, “My kid doesn’t want to turn the TV off or has a fit when we have tried to stop iPad time because they’re getting inconsiste­nt messages from me.” It sounds like you have a problem because you just described the problem to me, so you know what to do.

It sounds like you’re saying, keep your eyes open.

Be empowered as a parent. A lot of these things are common sense. There are some things that escape parents’ notice, such as the interactio­n with bedtime. You may say, ‘My kid isn’t tired, he’s watching TV.’ The TV is stimulatin­g the kid.

A second thing like that would be the effect of background television, which is still very common in many households. I point that out not to shame anybody. It may be adding a level of interferen­ce or distractio­n in your home that’s easy to overlook. It may be interferin­g with language acquisitio­n.

In what ways do you see screen time and technology as a potential positive for parents and children?

We all use digital media. It helps us learn about the world, it helps us connect with others and helps us be creative when we’re making media or engaging in sharing what we’ve created. To the extent we’re sharing those functions with our kids — learning, discoverin­g, sharing and creating — that’s good. It involves a lot more active involvemen­t than we’re used to thinking about with screens.

Whether you have a toddler or teen, when you’re having a conversati­on with them or engaging alongside them, that’s a net benefit.

You talk in the book about parents modelling a healthy

We all use digital media... it helps us connect with others, and helps us be creative... To the extent we’re sharing those functions with our kids — learning, discoverin­g, sharing and creating — that’s good.”

Anya Kamanetz | Author

approach to screens, and the research on babies’ reaction to their parent’s ‘blank face’. Explain your perspectiv­e.

I realised I couldn’t talk about kids and screens without talking about parents. We are creating the environmen­t our kids are growing up in.

The research on distracted parenting is very small but it’s worrisome. If there’s anything taking your attention away from your kids, whether you’re depressed, overworked or stressed out, kids feel that. It can affect attachment. When someone is stressed out at work and the phone is the conduit, if they’re depressed and using social media to be in a cycle instead of connecting with friends, that’s going to exacerbate it. The parent isn’t really caring for herself.

Can you talk more about how interactiv­e screens — and adult mediated screens — can offset the negative impacts on children’s learning, mental and behavioura­l health?

Erica Austin, a professor at Washington State University, studies parental mediation. She found that college students who recalled their parents laughing at commercial­s of certain drinks were more likely to have them.

On the positive side, if you remember your parents talking about the news, you were more likely to be civilly engaged as a college student. Whatever you might be doing as a parent in the home with media, your kids may be forming an impression. They’re always picking up on everything we do.

How do you see advances in technology like virtual real-

ity, augmented reality, artificial intelligen­ce, and the Internet of Things shaping our experience? How should parents prepare for this?

The notion of screens as being bounded and escapable is ending, that’s the crazy part. It’s everywhere all the time, truly everywhere, truly all the time.

The scary part of that is obvious: You’re not setting limits any more because your whole house is alive. The benefit is that it does interact in 3-D space. With Alexa, instead of picking up your phone and cutting off a conversati­on, you’re asking a question.

We have to update our strategies, but we don’t have to update our values. If we have an understand­ing that it’s good to connect in 3-D space offline, we’re going to have to protect those spaces.

There are opportunit­ies for engagement. We don’t want our kids to have unmediated relationsh­ips with bots.

Are you worried about people drawing mistaken conclusion­s from your book?

I find myself to be uncomforta­ble answering the questions about whether parents should be reading their [child’s] text messages and what age should kids get a phone. There’s a premise to that question that makes me uneasy and I have to do a lot of framing. Why does surveillan­ce feel OK when it’s your kid? Why do parents feel justified doing this?

Young kids need a thoughtful approach.

What are the positive things that can be done with screens?

I find pop culture to be a totally fun and low-stress way to interact with your kids, especially when it seems that you might be losing them. Technology turns the tables and makes the parents into students, where kids are the teachers and mentors.

That’s a really nice dynamic to have with your kid. Try asking your kid to teach you or show you something and see where it goes.

I would apply that to setting balance too. “Hey, I think we all could work on having our devices down more when we’re at home, can you help us think of some ways to do that?”

Technology turns the tables and makes the parents into students, where kids are the teachers. Try asking your kid to teach you or show you something and see where it goes.”

Anya Kamanetz|

Author

What are you hearing from audiences?

A lot of parents want help talking to schools about their schools’ use of tech. It’s an important conversati­on that I think parents should be proactive about.

They want to know, I spend all this time figuring out screen rules and my kid goes to pre-K and is on the screen or watching television and I don’t understand. Or my 14-year-old goes on a computer for homework and is on six hours a night.

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PARENTS SHOULD BE REALISTIC ABOUT THE LIMITS THEY SET FOR THEIR CHILDREN — AND EVEN ENJOY QUALITY SCREEN TIME WITH THEM, AUTHOR SAYS
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