Session 3 Notes - IChild - UnInformed
Session 3 Notes - IChild - UnInformed
Session 3 Notes - IChild - UnInformed
Media use has taken this generation by storm. And even if you or
your child are not using 8 hours a day in media, even 30 minutes a
day is more than they would have used 30 years ago. So how is it
affecting them?
Points to Consider
1. Tech Addictions
William was a 4 years old, and one morning at 04 in the morning,
William came, matched into his dad’s bedroom, woke his dad up
and said “dad, I need the I-pad.” Dad sent William back to bed and
told him that what he really needed was to go back to sleep. But at
7 O’clock in the morning, when dad woke up, he found William in
the living room with the I-pad that had been besides his dad’s bed.
The battery level indicating he had been playing a game for over
two hours. This wasn’t the first time William had been exhibiting
such symptoms. Latter that day as his parents were considering
William’s symptoms, they realised that William had become an I-
pad addict.
“About 160,000 South Korean children between the ages of five and
nine years old are addicted to the Internet via smartphones, tablets
or PCs” –http://www.dailytech.com/
Many+South+Korean+Children+Have+Internet+Addiction+Schools+
to
+Teach+Dangers/article29289.htm#sthash.O4OtBNI8.dpuf
Symptoms of addiction:
" Withdrawal
" Tolerance
" Loss of interest in other activities
" Lack of control
" Deception
" Means of escaping reality
" Losing opportunities
– http://www.livescience.com/40680-signs-kids-addiction-to-
ipad.html
2. Current recommendations
Recent studies on the impact of media have linked television to the over-
stimulation of an infant’s brain, leading to the development of Attention-
Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) in young children.
2. Delayed development
Physical Activity
• improve overall mental health and quality of life
• enhance brain function and cognition
• improve behavior
• improve concentration
• increase blood and oxygen flow to the brain
• increase levels of norepinephrine and endorphins resulting in a
reduction of stress and an improvement of mood
• increase growth factors that help to create new nerve cells and
support synaptic plasticity
•
– Physical Activity and Performance at School. Journal of the
American Medical Association of Pediatrics, Jan. 2012
“The whole body is designed for action; and unless the physical
powers are kept in health by active exercise, the mental powers
cannot long be used to their highest capacity. The physical inaction
which seems almost inevitable in the schoolroom--together with
other unhealthful conditions--makes it a trying place for children,
especially for those of feeble constitution.” -Education, page 207
https://m.egwwritings.org/en/book/29.10883.
Obesity
4. Sleep deprivation
6. Aggression
7. Digital dementia
dementia
noun Medicine a chronic or persistent mental disorder marked by
memory failures, personality changes, and impaired reasoning.
It should come later in life, but they are finding something now
termed early onset digital dementia . And they found about 15% of
the population in two countries{south korea and calafonia] they did
studies on, 14-15% od the teenage experiencing
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/cris-rowan/10-reasons-why-
handheld-devices-should-be-banned_b_4899218.html
3. Health risks
“75% (of 127 studies) reported that more time spent with media was
associated with a negative health outcome.” – Media + Child and
Adolescent Health: A Systematic Review. Common Sense Media
“…time spent with a computer may take the place of time spent
exercising or being active, and may put children at risk for obesity,
and eye, wrist, and back problems.” – Shields, M. K., and Behrman,
R. E. (Fall/Winter 2000). Children and computer technology:
Analysis and recommendations. The Future of Children, 10(2):
4-30.
http://www.childtrends.org/?indicators=home-computer-access#
edn3
4. Eye damage
Eye strain from hours of screen time can result in eye irritation,
dryness, fatigue or blurred vision, and such problems are
increasingly common, according to a new report.
"Some of us are using these things for up to nine hours a day. Your
eye muscles have to focus at that near range and that can be
fatiguing," Dr. Christopher Starr, an associate professor of
ophthalmology at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York, told
CBS "This Morning."
"You can imagine if you were at the gym and you held a dumbbell,
your bicep would be extremely sore nine hours later.... Same thing
for your eyes, you have to take breaks to relieve those muscles," he
said.
Most digital screens are backlit and emit blue light, or high-energy
visible (HEV) light wavelengths, which the group said can cause
irritation and possibly long-term damage to the retina. Blue light is
also known to suppress the sleep hormone melatonin, causing an
artificial feeling of wakefulness and disrupting sleep patterns, which
can add to eye strain.
"When you're not blinking, and you're staring and your eyes are
wide open, tears evaporate very quickly," Starr said. "You get dry
spots, blurred vision, it can cause redness, pain, and over the
course of the day it just worsens and worsens.”
Just like other muscles in the body, the eyes need a varied
"workout" and some respite from prolonged strain.
“Blue light”
“…blue light penetrates all the way to the retina (the inner lining of
the back of the eye)…
[L]aboratory studies have shown that too much exposure to blue
light can damage light-sensitive cells in the retina. This causes
changes that resemble those of macular degeneration, which can
lead to permanent vision loss.” – Gary Heiting, OD. http://
www.allaboutvision.com/cvs/blue-light.htm
5. Interactive media
Media use:
Attention deficits
It’s designed to hold attention!
More studies
“…kids under the age of 5 who watched two hours of TV a day were
20 percent more likely than kids who watched no TV to have
attention problems at school age.” – Dr Dimitri Christakis, cited in
http://www.everydayhealth.com/adhd-awareness/does-technology-
cause-adhd.aspx
7. Content
" An average American child will view 200,000 violent acts and
16,000 murders by age 18.
" Two-thirds of all programming contains violence
" Violence is typically associated with humor and often goes
unpunished
" Violence is often shown as a way to accomplish good
" Young children struggle to differentiate between reality and
fantasy
" Desensitizes children
" Viewing violence can decrease willingness to help others in need
– University of Michigan Studies
The question is what will you do with this information? Don’t just
say, oh yeah, media is bad for kids, and keep letting them use it. It
doesn’t do much good to simply know this information if you don’t
put it into practice.
“Although 81 percent of our users felt that children today spend too
much time on smart devices, it hasn’t put most of them off using
them to entertain their baby.” – Babies.UK, quoted on http://
www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/10008707/Toddlers-becoming-so-
addicted-to-iPads-they-require-therapy.html