Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Science Technology

Study Links Restricting Screen Time For Kids To Higher Mental Performance (washingtonpost.com) 57

Parents who possess the resolve to separate their children from their smartphones may be helping their kids' brainpower, a new study suggests. A report adds: Children who use smartphones and other devices in their free time for fewer than two hours a day performed better on cognitive tests assessing their thinking, language, and memory, according to a study published this week in the Lancet Child & Adolescent Health. The study assessed the behavior of 4,500 children, ages 8 to 11, by looking at their sleep schedules, how much time they spent on screens and their amount of exercise, and analyzed how those factors impacted the children's mental abilities. The researchers compared the results with national guidelines for children's health. The guidelines recommend that children in that age group, get at least an hour of physical activity, no more than two hours of recreational screen time and nine to 11 hours of sleep per night. The researchers found that only 5 percent of children met all three recommendations. Sixty-three percent of children spent more than two hours a day staring at screens, failing to meet the screen-time limit.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Study Links Restricting Screen Time For Kids To Higher Mental Performance

Comments Filter:
  • by Spy Handler ( 822350 ) on Thursday September 27, 2018 @11:40AM (#57384580) Homepage Journal

    Steve Jobs (even though he was an asshole) was a wise man and he wouldn't let his kids touch iPhones or iPads... he didn't want them to become stupid.

    • There we go. One study finds a correlation between lower mental performance and watching phones or TV all day and people conclude that kids should never see a screen before they're 18.

      That is as stupid as "Kids who only drink water lack essential nutrients, therefore I'll never give water to my kids.".

      Obviously, kids whose parents use phones or TVs as a babysitter are much likely to have lower mental performance than those who interact with their parents.

      Which doesn't mean phones, TV, and other stuff sho

    • He may have been wise on this one issue, but there are certainly better people you could get parenting advice from. His first daughter devoted much of her book on how bad a father he was.
  • Let kids go outside (Score:5, Interesting)

    by alvinrod ( 889928 ) on Thursday September 27, 2018 @11:42AM (#57384600)
    I think part of this gravitation towards more screen time is an unwarranted fear by parents that something awful will happen to little Johnny if he's allowed to go outside. Gangs, pedophiles, drug dealers, Jehovah's witnesses, or other unsavory individuals will sure get poor little Johnny and cause him irreparable harm.

    The wold has only become a safer place since we grew up. Somehow all of us (and the generations before us) managed to survive playing outside for most of the day. Maybe a few of us ran into what might be considered a dicey situation for a child of that age, but part of growing up is learning to navigate those situations. Expecting anyone to turn 18 and magically become an adult is foolhardy. All we've done is created developmentally delayed individuals who are only starting to grow into adults when they go to college and get the hell away from their overprotective parents.

    If you trap kids inside all day, it shouldn't be any surprise that they turn to screens to give them something to do. Allow kids the opportunity to play outside and I suspect that many of them will naturally use screens a lot less frequently.
    • he wold has only become a safer place since we grew up. Somehow all of us (and the generations before us) managed to survive playing outside for most of the day. Maybe a few of us ran into what might be considered a dicey situation for a child of that age, but part of growing up is learning to navigate those situations. Expecting anyone to turn 18 and magically become an adult is foolhardy. All we've done is created developmentally delayed individuals who are only starting to grow into adults when they go t

    • by tepples ( 727027 ) <tepples@gmai3.14159l.com minus pi> on Thursday September 27, 2018 @12:34PM (#57384942) Homepage Journal

      All we've done is created developmentally delayed individuals who are only starting to grow into adults when they go to college and get the hell away from their overprotective parents.

      If you trap kids inside all day, it shouldn't be any surprise that they turn to screens to give them something to do. Allow kids the opportunity to play outside and I suspect that many of them will naturally use screens a lot less frequently.

      I doubt it's entirely the parents' fault. I imagine parents are keeping their kids indoors in order to keep them away from Child Overprotective Services.

  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Thursday September 27, 2018 @11:42AM (#57384602)

    It's less the amount of time spent with computers and other electronic devices, it's more how they are used. I can of course only offer my own experience, but I had my first computer when I was 10. I learned programming, and I did learn building periphery for it, simply because that was a necessity back then. Before I was 20, I was already pretty good at both of those things, developing hardware and programs to disable certain routines in software that aren't too useful for the user and sometimes even detrimental to his plans concerning the application of the hard- or software he wanted to use.

    Both of these things kinda let me reach the position I'm in now. Back then there was no college courses for IT security and certainly none for malware analysis. But the skills you develop when redesigning code other people wrote to facilitate the use of aforementioned code translates pretty well into those fields.

    Of course if all you do with your screen time is to tap the screen to rack up some points in a clicker game, the net benefit of such an activity is quite negligible. And it also isn't quite stimulating for your higher brain functions to watch some clips or exchange emojis instead of actually talking to people.

    The problem isn't so much that our kids use electronic devices, the problem is in what they do with them. And an even bigger problem is that them being mindless, consuming drones without any incentive to actually create something themselves is pretty much what pretty much every corporation out there wants them to be. You're fighting an uphill battle there.

    • It is certainly possible to get huge positive benefits from "screens". But it is not realistic to expect such to happen, especially for young children. Even educational software is very gamified and of dubious positive value. It is only when you get to more real courses that computers offer significant educational value, which is for older children, and even those just do not work for everyone.

      Furthermore, the screen world is full of entertainment, infortainment, and edutainment. I would say getting use

  • whole CBT thing, and the hours of required homework including word processing.

    I do tend to agree with physical activities being important, and if a kid is tired enough, they'll sleep.

    Starting times for students (pickup at 6:00am) also seem to screw with sleep cycles. Include after school activities (sports, music...) and a 10-12 hour school day becomes the norm.

  • Is there any way around the paywall?

    Let's not link to articles behind paywalls. Ok?
  • We all know we parents are losing the war against screens. The best we can do is make sure that the kids consume semi-educational things on their screens. Now that my kids are in elementary school the teachers make comments about the whole class being more and more advanced by the time they start. I attribute that to the screen time the kids get.
    • We all know we parents are losing the war against screens. The best we can do is make sure that the kids consume semi-educational things on their screens.

      Or, you could you know...assert your authority of being a parent and NOT giving the kids everything they want, including "screens"....or at the very least, be very judicious about when you ALLOW them to use them, and then, take them away.

      And your elementary kid does not need a fucking smart phone.

      You as a parent has the authority, control and responsib

  • I honestly think that balance is key. No, your kid shouldn't be in front of a screen all day every day, and TV and games are never a substitute for parental attention. Kids need socialization, kinesthetic learning, etc. However, the AAP says my 15mo daughter shouldn't get any screen time except for video calls until she's 18mo. I think that's a bit too far. We DO spend a few minutes a day with some learning apps, usually 10min or less. Because of it, she's starting to associate letters with the sounds they
    • You can do plenty of learning activities for young kids that do not require screens.
      • And we do. That doesn't mean we can't also do activities that do require screens. It isn't a zero-sum game.
  • I get way more screen time than I used to and, uhh..., now I, umm...

    Oooh! Look at that cat video!

  • study was conducted by coordinating parents who want their kids to do well in school and don't want them on the computer or cellphone. that's a self-selective group. this study is bunk.

  • I think it more likely that the children who listen to their parents about limiting screen time and other harmful activities are the brighter, more creative children. You can only tell a dip-shit so many times to stop wasting their time on garbage and apply themselves to something useful. You can lead a horse to water, but, you can't make them drink.

Computer programmers do it byte by byte.

Working...