Try as she might, it's become much harder for the Baltimore-area mom
to create similar memories for her 6-year-old twins, Casey and Parker.
The exuberant kindergartners have been surrounded by technology all of
their lives. They bounced to Baby Einstein CDs, learned Spanish from
Dora the Explorer, and are reading at a first-grade level thanks to
their Leapster pads. They are adept at getting to games and apps on
mom's iPhone and grandma's iPad.
Though she came of age in the
"wired" 1990s, Marx worries that all of the gadgets surrounding her
daughters are too isolating, and are taking them away from precious
family time.
"I had video games when I was a kid, and it was fun,Find detailed product information for howo tractor
and other products. but now there's so much more out there that
monopolizes people's time," says the radio traffic reporter, who is in
her early 30s. "I don't know if kids today would get by without knowing
these things. It's becoming all electronic. The only thing electronic I
had was the board game Operation."
Marx is not alone in
wondering how our increasingly technology-focused world is affecting her
children and other "digital natives." Parenting can seem daunting in
the digital era. Smartphones, tablets, apps and social networking have
transformed how people work, play and communicate. Parents who don't
keep up with the changes can feel like they are standing at the
precipice of a widening technological gulf. They don't want to lose
their ability to stay close to their children and guide them to a
successful, healthy future.
According to a survey released by
the Kaiser Family Foundation in 2010, children between the ages of 8 and
18 spent more than 53 hours a week on electronic media. In a typical
day, they devoted seven hours and 38 minutes listening to music,
watching TV and movies, playing video games and hanging out online, with
many multitasking and using two forms of media at once.
Scant
data exists on the effects of newer digital media on children and
adolescents, experts say. The growing ubiquity of mobile digital
devices—and the videos, music, games and other online content they
provide—seems to beg a re-examination of the roles and responsibilities
of parents and children in all of this.
In a clinical report
titled "The Impact of Social Media on Children, Adolescents, and
Families," the American Academy of Pediatrics took note of the benefits
social media can have, including socialization and communication as well
as enhanced learning opportunities, but it warned that parents may not
truly understand this integral part of their children's lives.
Parents
"frequently do not have the technical abilities or time needed to keep
pace with their children in the ever-changing Internet landscape," says
the study. "In addition, these parents often lack a basic understanding
that kids' online lives are an extension of their offline lives. The end
result is often a knowledge and technical skill gap between parents and
youth, which creates a disconnect in how these parents and youth
participate in the online world together."
Kevin Everhart, a
licensed psychologist and director of the Psychological Services Center
for the University of Colorado-Denver Clinical Health Psychology
Program,We mainly supply professional craftspeople with crys talbeads wholesale
shamballa Bracele , has treated children who have accessed online
pornography, and others who are coping with video gaming and other
Internet dependencies. He has seen firsthand how unbridled access to
such information and activities can disrupt young lives.
"If
parents are not aware of the kinds of images that kids actually do
access through digital media, what ends up happening is there's sort of a
burden for a child for attempting to cope with what they are seeing,
along with not telling their parents because they are concerned they'll
get in trouble. This is seen with pornography and also seen with violent
images, blatant images of violence and death," Everhart says.
In
the end, he concedes that no one really knows how free and open access
to so much information on the Web will, in fact, affect children and
teens over the long run. "We don't know what the verdict is for what
this cohort (generation) is going to endure, or what they are going to
be like, but we are actually in a place where we are not going to be
able to keep our children from some exposure to things we don't want
them to be exposed to," the psychologist adds.
Dana Lauren Berry
of Centennial, Colo., has seen the benefits of digital technology in
her children's lives. Her sons, Connor, 5, and Lawson, 2, each own an
iPad and navigate their way easily to apps and educational games that
have improved their ability to recognize letters, spell, rhyme and match
images.
"Kids today seem so much smarter," says Berry, a public
relations manager for a hotel in Denver. "Technology is so portable, it
makes it easier for learning on the go.Klaus Multiparking is an
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However,
Berry and her husband, John, limit the time their children watch TV and
use their iPads, and encourage them to do puzzles, read books, and play
games like Candy Land and Memory.
"As adults we spend so much
time in front of screens. I feel children should get to be children,"
Berry says.We are pleased to offer the following list of professional mold maker and casters. "Regular play and physical activities come first. We spend a lot of time at our neighborhood park."
As
quaint as it seems now, transistor radios worried post-World War II
parents. For the first time, teenagers could listen to what they wanted
when they wanted, without their parents' input.We recently added Stained
glass mosaic
Tile to our inventory. Transistors supercharged the rock 'n' roll era,
and the career of a swivel-hipped singer named Elvis. With each passing
decade, technology—from television, movies and music to video games and
the Internet—has been scrutinized for its effects, both good and bad, on
children and adolescents.
That scrutiny has since turned to
smartphones, tablets, laptops, MP3 players and other digital devices
that enable people to communicate with each other 24/7 by text, voice,
photo or video. Children and adolescents can access the Web anytime,
anywhere and without "PLOS"—parents looking over their shoulders—and
they do, sometimes with embarrassing and tragic results.
In
addition to peer pressure, substance abuse and teenage pregnancy,
families now have to contend with "Facebook depression" when children
feel their Web personas don't measure up to the real world, cyber
bullying and sexting—the sharing of nude photos and videos via mobile
devices.
"The adolescent brain is not fully mature until age 25
or so," says University of New Mexico professor of pediatrics Victor C.
Strasburger, author of Children, Adolescents, and the Media. "Our job as
parents is to limit the damage."
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