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The amount of time young children spend on mobile devices such as smartphones and tablets has tripled in the last four years, according to a nationwide report that measures technology use among children 8 years old and younger.
Children in that age group, on average, currently spend 48 minutes per day on a mobile device, compared to 15 minutes per day in 2013 and 5 minutes in 2011, according to the report released Thursday, by Common Sense Media, a nonprofit group that reviews media and digital products for children.
The report states that, overall, children spend two hours and 19 minutes a day with “screen media,” which includes mobile devices, television, DVDs and videos, video game players, computers and small digital devices such as iPods and virtual reality headsets. However, how children are using that media time has shifted from 2011 to 2017, researchers state. A third of all screen time is now mobile, with 35 percent of children on mobile devices in 2017, compared to 4 percent in 2011.
The report, titled “Common Sense Census 2017 : Media Use By Kids Age Zero to Eight,” is the third in a series of reports conducted by Common Sense. Previous reports, based on similar questions about media use among children, were released in 2011 and 2013. Findings in the new report are based on responses from 1,454 parents who participated in an online survey conducted Jan. 20, 2017 to Feb. 10, 2017. For the report, parents were asked how their children use media during the week and on the weekends. Specifically, they were asked how much time children spend watching or engaging with media and on what device.
The report found that among families with children 8 and younger, 98 percent of homes have a mobile device compared to 75 percent in 2013 and 52 percent in 2011. In those same households, 78 percent have a tablet, up from 41 percent in 2013 and 8 percent in 2011. The independent use of technology has also changed for young children, the report states. Forty-two percent of children ages 8 and younger have their own tablet device. This is an increase from 7 percent in 2013 and 1 percent in 2011.
In its 2016 guidelines for media use the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that parents should avoid screen time for children under 18 months. For children 18 to 24 months old, pediatricians recommend parents watch with children so they understand the content. For children ages 2 to 5 years, screen use should be limited to one hour of high-quality programs per day. For children ages 6 and older, time limits should be set and remain consistent, the guidelines state. They also state that only 1 in 5 parents said they know about the American Academy of Pediatrics recommendations for children and media use.
The Common Sense Media report found that virtual reality headsets and voice activated assistant devices, such as Amazon Echo or Google Home, are increasing in popularity and 1 in 10 homes with young children reported having one of those devices. Other shifts in technology were more predictable. For instance, more families subscribe to digital streaming services like Netflix and Hulu than families who pay for traditional cable TV. However, researchers said they were surprised to find out “children overwhelmingly prefer paper books over digital.” Of the 29 minutes children spent reading each day, they spent three minutes on devices and the remaining time reading from a printed book.
While the digital divide — the gap between those who have access to technology and those who do not — has narrowed for families, it still remains an issue, the report states. The report states that 96 percent of families with high incomes have internet access at home compared to 74 percent of families with low incomes with internet access. The report defines “low income” as families earning less than $30,000 a year and “high income” as families earning more than $75,000 a year.
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Owen 6 years ago6 years ago
It doesn't surprise me that most Americans are unaware of the 2016 guidelines for media use from the American Academy of Pediatrics. I'm currently the foster parent of a medically-fragile infant who has multiple medical appointments every week. At every single clinic and hospital waiting room we visit, there is at least one TV, often more, playing children's tv shows and movies. Toys and books in these rooms are rare, making it all but impossible … Read More
It doesn’t surprise me that most Americans are unaware of the 2016 guidelines for media use from the American Academy of Pediatrics. I’m currently the foster parent of a medically-fragile infant who has multiple medical appointments every week. At every single clinic and hospital waiting room we visit, there is at least one TV, often more, playing children’s tv shows and movies. Toys and books in these rooms are rare, making it all but impossible to keep his attention off of the screen. The result of this has been that the infant in my care is exposed to TV screens between 1 and 3 hours every week. When he recently had surgery in a children’s hospital, there was a television attached to his bed, and whenever we would leave his bedside a nurse would turn it on and put it in his face. If pediatric medical establishments can’t bring themselves to follow the advice of the American Academy of Pediatrics, how are their patients supposed to know about and follow this advice?
Roxana 6 years ago6 years ago
Thanks for covering the CSM report. The American Academy of Pediatrics had issued two sets of guidelines in 2016. This page includes both sets, along with many other updates and reports related to screen time, virtual reality health/safety gaps, and privacy protection resources: http://bit.ly/screen_time