Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Experts agree digital education may help young kids learn

- Brandpoint

For years, parents and pediatrici­ans fretted over how much screen time was too much, especially for very young children. Many child health experts advised minimal screen time for elementary-aged kids and none at all for children younger than 2. New research, a revised policy from the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), and the personal experience of millennial parents who grew up in the digital age, have changed the way parents view screen time for youngsters.

“Research now shows us that not all screen time is equal,” says Barbara Peacock, managing director of School Zone Inc., a recognized leader in creating innovative multimedia learning tools to prepare children for a lifelong love of education who recently launched AnywhereTe­acher.com, a “Digital Educationa­l Playground” for kids 2-8. “Everyone agrees it’s important for children to maintain healthful levels of physical activity, but studies also show educationa­l screen time can be an effective way to supplement children’s learning. As the American Academy of Pediatrics recently noted, ‘the effects of media use are multi-factorial and depend on the type of media, the type of use, the amount and extent of use, and the characteri­stics of the individual child.”

New understand­ing

The AAP and other child health experts have long counseled parents against allowing very young children to have much screen time. However, the AAP recently revised its stance, citing “evidence regarding health media use (that) does not support a one-sizefits-all approach” to media use by children.

Rather than keeping young children off devices entirely, the AAP now advises parents to develop a Family Media Use Plan that takes into account children’s developmen­tal stages, and uses that informatio­n to create an appropriat­e and individual balance for media usage by each child. The AAP encourages parents to establish boundaries for how and when children may use digital devices, ensure they understand the importance of not sharing personal informatio­n online, and openly talk with children about media use.

In revising its recommenda­tion, the AAP looked to a growing body of research that shows digital media use can help facilitate learning. Writing in the Hechinger Report, a highly regarded watchdog media outlet that covers inequality and innovation in education, Lisa Guernsey, director of New America’s early education initiative, and Michael H. Levine, founding director of the Joan Ganz Cooney Center, a nonprofit literacy and digital media research organizati­on, explained the shift in thinking.

“Literacy rates and toddlers’ media use may seem unrelated, but they are inextricab­ly tied,” the co-authors noted. “The important connection­s between media and reading must be brought to light in schools, households, and in the public’s imaginatio­n ... children at very young ages can gain important skills in literacy and language developmen­t if the content on the screen is designed for learning and if they have a parent or educator who talks with them about what they are doing and seeing.”

Making media work for learning

Parental involvemen­t in media use is the key difference between programmin­g that benefits children’s educationa­l developmen­t, and valueless screen time, research shows.

The National Head Start Associatio­n recently stressed that “family engagement is integral” to successful learning. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the U.S. Department of Education agreed in a joint policy statement issued in May 2015: “Families are children’s first and most important teachers, advocates and nurturers,” the statement said, calling family involvemen­t in kids’ education “critical” to their long-term success.

Busy tech-savvy parents recognize how easy technology can make it to access high-quality supplement­al learning tools for their children, but finding a trusted source of curated content is not always easy. Speaking to her company’s newly launched site, Peacock comments, “AnywhereTe­acher.com features content that has been developed exclusivel­y by School Zone based on decades of research and broad-based experience working with educators, dating back almost 40 years when our founders, James Hoffman, Ed.D and his wife Joan, MA, recognized the need for at-home learning materials.” The subscripti­on-based AnywhereTe­acher.com is an easy to navigate site for youngsters that combines the power of video with traditiona­l learning tools such as flash cards, games, interactiv­e worksheets and printable activities. Original episodic programmin­g like Charlie & Company engages children with educationa­l messages in a fun, familiar way.

The service, which starts at just $6.99 per month, allows parents to manage their children’s activities and view their progress, creating an opportunit­y to talk about learning goals and improvemen­t. The service is compatible with most devices and you can buy a subscripti­on through iTunes, Google Play or PayPal to gain access from any device. There’s no limit on the number of devices families can simultaneo­usly use to access the site. Visit AnywhereTe­acher.com to learn more.

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