Khaleej Times

Making screen time rules for your kids

- Vanessa LoBue The writer is the Editor of Open magazine

Some years ago the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommende­d that children under the age of 2 should not watch any television, and slightly older kids should be limited to 2 hours of screen time per day. Recently the AAP changed their policy. They now recommend that parents keep infants under 18 months of age away from screens as much as possible, unless it is to video chat. Although some researcher­s would disagree, a little bit of screen time is not all that bad, as long as you have the right expectatio­ns about what screens are and what they are not, and about what they can and can’t offer your kids. Here’s what research can tell us:

Screens are a means by which kids can learn if the content is educationa­l. But, this is only true for older kids and there is little evidence children under the age of 2 can learn from screens at all, which is what prompted the AAP’s original no-screen-time-forbabies policy. There is no evidence that the act of watching a TV or playing with an iPad makes kids dumber, hurts their vocabulary or reading skills, or makes them fail math. It’s what screen time is replacing that can be detrimenta­l to learning, like if your child is watching TV instead of playing outside or doing his homework. The bottom line is, active play is always better than using a screen. The bottom line is, active play is always better than using a screen

Screens can distract kids if they are left on in the background. There’s research suggesting that background TV distracts kids from other activities, like playing with toys or talking to parents. It’s distractin­g nature also reduces the quality of children’s play. Though kids can learn from screen time or educationa­l television shows, there’s lots of research showing that kids learn much better by interactin­g with their parents, friends, and teachers, and they learn better from screens by watching it with you.

The content of children’s screen time matters. There is mounting evidence that engaging with media that contains violent content (including both TV and video games) does in fact increase aggressive behaviour in children. With these ideas in mind, my own rule of thumb for allowable screen time has been to ask myself: What is screen time replacing? If your kids want to spend all their time with screens instead of playing outside, it might be time to make some rules. In fact, the AAP’s new recommenda­tions involve creating a family plan for screen time, so that parents can teach children about appropriat­e screen time use.

The writer is an Assistant Professor of Psychology at Rutgers University specialisi­ng in infant and child developmen­t.

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