Derby Telegraph

PLUGGED-IN PRESCHOOLE­RS

CHILDREN AS YOUNG AS FOUR ARE NOW BEING GIVEN THEIR OWN SMARTPHONE­S, RESEARCH FINDS

- By ALICE CACHIA

CHILDREN as young as four are being given their own mobile phones.

The news emerged in the latest report on childhood media use by the communicat­ions watchdog Ofcom.

It found one per cent of children aged four or five in the UK had a smartphone in 2017 - an estimated 16,631 children in all.

Smartphone­s allow users to play games, use apps and access social media websites.

The likelihood a child will own one rises rapidly with age, the report found.

Some seven per cent of six and seven year olds had a smartphone, or 106,734 in total.

Among eight and nine year olds, 21 per cent - or 332,469 in total - had a smartphone.

By the time children reach 10 and 11, more than half (58 per cent) have a smartphone. That works out as 1.6 million children.

The data also shows that more than nine in every 10 children aged 12-15 (94 per cent) own at least three media devices. This includes things like games consoles, laptops, and smartphone­s. Children in the same age range say they spend around 18 hours a week using their mobile phone. The Ofcom survey is based on parents’ responses.

The number of children owning smartphone­s may actually be higher than the data shows, because some parents might not have admitted that their child owned a smartphone.

Education think tank The Education Policy Institute published a report last year looking at the impact that using social media has on young people’s mental health.

The report said: “Technology is evolving rapidly.

“The increasing­ly private nature of online activity, with instant messaging and smartphone­s, means that attempts to isolate young people from all online risks are likely to be ineffectiv­e.

“Policy-makers have struggled to keep pace with technologi­cal change.

“Successive government­s, while having offered guidance and resources, made changes to the curriculum, and implemente­d strategies to promote safety, are often unable to keep abreast with the fast changing nature of online risk – meaning responses to protect, and build resilience in, young people are inadequate and often outdated.”

Nearly a fifth (19 per cent) of parents said they found it hard to control the amount of time children aged five to seven spent looking at screens.

That rose to a third of parents when considerin­g children aged eight to 11, and 41 per cent of parents of children aged 12 to 15.

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 ??  ?? Some parents may let their children go on tablets for educationa­l purposes
Some parents may let their children go on tablets for educationa­l purposes

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