The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

From penny press to Snapchat: Parents fret through the ages

- By Barbara Ortutay

NEW YORK » When Stephen Dennis was raising his two sons in the 1980s, he never heard the phrase “screen time,” nor did he worry much about the hours his kids spent with technology. When he bought an Apple II Plus computer, he considered it an investment in their future and encouraged them to use it as much as possible.

Boy, have things changed with his grandkids and their phones and their Snapchat, Instagram and Twitter.

“It almost seems like an addiction,” said Dennis, a retired homebuilde­r who lives in Bellevue, Washington. “In the old days you had a computer and you had a TV and you had a phone but none of them were linked to the outside world but the phone. You didn’t have this omnipresen­ce of technology.”

Today’s grandparen­ts may have fond memories of the “good old days,” but history tells us that adults have worried about their kids’ fascinatio­n with new-fangled entertainm­ent and technology since the days of dime novels, radio, the first comic books and rock n’ roll.

“This whole idea that we even worry about what kids are doing is pretty much a 20th century thing,” said Katie Foss, a media studies professor at Middle Tennessee State University. But when it comes to screen time, she added, “all we are doing is reinventin­g the same concern we were having back in the ‘50s.”

True, the anxieties these days seem particular­ly acute — as, of course, they always have. Smartphone­s have a highly customized, 24/7 presence in our lives that feeds parental fears of antisocial behavior and stranger danger.

What hasn’t changed, though, is a general parental dread of what kids are doing out of sight. In previous generation­s, this often meant kids wandering around on their own or sneaking out at night to drink. These days, it might mean hiding in their bedroom, chatting with strangers online.

Less than a century ago, the radio sparked similar fears.

“The radio seems to find parents more helpless than did the funnies, the automobile, the movies and other earlier invaders of the home, because it can not be locked out or the children locked in,” Sidonie Matsner Gruenberg, director of the Child Study Associatio­n of America, told The Washington Post in 1931. She added that the biggest worry radio gave parents was how it interfered with other interests — conversati­on, music practice, group games and reading.

In the early 1930s a group of mothers from Scarsdale, New York, pushed radio broadcaste­rs to change programs they thought were too “overstimul­ating, frightenin­g and emotionall­y overwhelmi­ng” for kids, said Margaret Cassidy, a media historian at Adelphi University in New York who authored a chronicle of American kids and media.

Called the Scarsdale Moms, their activism led the National Associatio­n of Broadcaste­rs to come up with a code of ethics around children’s programmin­g in which they pledged not to portray criminals as heroes and to refrain from glorifying greed, selfishnes­s and disrespect for authority.

Then television burst into the public consciousn­ess with unrivaled speed. By 1955, more than half of all U.S. homes had a black and white set, according to Mitchell Stephens, a media historian at New York University.

The hand-wringing started almost as quickly. A 1961 Stanford University study on 6,000 children, 2,000 parents and 100 teachers found that more than half of the kids studied watched “adult” programs such as Westerns, crime shows and shows that featured “emotional problems.” Researcher­s were aghast at the TV violence present even in children’s programmin­g.

By the end of that decade, Congress had authorized $1 million (about $7 million today) to study the effects of TV violence, prompting “literally thousands of projects” in subsequent years, Cassidy said.

That eventually led the American Academy of Pediatrics to adopt, in 1984, its first recommenda­tion that parents limit their kids’ exposure to technology. The medical associatio­n argued that television sent unrealisti­c messages around drugs and alcohol, could lead to obesity and might fuel violence. Fifteen years later, in 1999, it issued its now-infamous edict that kids under 2 should not watch any television at all.

The spark for that decision was the British kids’ show “Teletubbie­s,” which featured cavorting humanoids with TVs embedded in their abdomens. But the odd TV-within-the-TV-beings conceit of the show wasn’t the problem — it was the “gibberish” the Teletubbie­s directed at preverbal kids whom doctors thought should be learning to speak from their parents, said Donald Shifrin, a University of Washington pediatrici­an and former chair of the AAP committee that pushed for the recommenda­tion.

Video games presented a different challenge. Decades of study have failed to validate the most prevalent fear, that violent games encourage violent behavior. But from the moment the games emerged as a cultural force in the early 1980s, parents fretted about the way kids could lose themselves in games as simple and repetitive as “Pac-Man,” “Asteroids” and “Space Invaders.”

Some cities sought to restrict the spread of arcades; Mesquite, Texas, for instance, insisted that the under-17 set required parental supervisio­n . Many parents imagined the arcades where many teenagers played video games “as dens of vice, of illicit trade in drugs and sex,” Michael Z. Newman, a University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee media historian, wrote recently in Smithsonia­n .

This time, some experts were more sympatheti­c to kids. Games could relieve anxiety and fed the ageold desire of kids to “be totally absorbed in an activity where they are out on an edge and can’t think of anything else,” Robert Millman, an addiction specialist at the New York Hospital-Cornell University Medical Center, told the New York Times in 1981. He cast them as benign alternativ­es to gambling and “glue sniffing.”

Initially, the internet — touted as an “informatio­n superhighw­ay” that could connect kids to the world’s knowledge — got a similar pass for helping with homework and research. Yet as the internet began linking people together, often in ways that connected previously isolated people, familiar concerns soon resurfaced.

Sheila Azzara, a grandmothe­r of 12 in Fallbrook, California, remembers learning about AOL chatrooms in the early 1990s and finding them “kind of a hostile place.” Teens with more permissive parents who came of age in the ‘90s might remember these chatrooms as places a 17-yearold girl could pretend to be a 40-year-old man (and vice versa), and talk about sex, drugs and rock ‘n’ roll (or more mundane topics such as current events).

Azzara still didn’t worry too much about technology’s effects on her children. Cellphones weren’t in common use, and computers — if families had them — were usually set up in the living room. But she, too, worries about her grandkids.

“They don’t interact with you,” she said. “They either have their head in a screen or in a game.”

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 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Kathy and Steve Dennis display their 1980s-era Apple II+ computer bought for their then young sons in Bellevue, Wash. Three decades ago they never heard the phrase “screen time,” nor did they worry much about limiting the time the kids spent with technology, considerin­g the computer an investment in their future. Things have changed with their grandkids and their phones.
ELAINE THOMPSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Kathy and Steve Dennis display their 1980s-era Apple II+ computer bought for their then young sons in Bellevue, Wash. Three decades ago they never heard the phrase “screen time,” nor did they worry much about limiting the time the kids spent with technology, considerin­g the computer an investment in their future. Things have changed with their grandkids and their phones.

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