Confession time: I use the iPad as a babysitter sometimes. I know – all the experts say not to. But there have been so many times over the years that what I’ve needed was just to have my child distracted for a few minutes so I can take a shower or unload the dishwasher or make an essential phone call. Maybe you’ve felt this way, too.
My nine-year-old was born after the introduction of the smartphone. She’s a true digital native – technology is part of her daily life, and she can learn to navigate new technology so quickly it’s just astounding. And right along with the development of a generation of true digital natives, the recommendations of digital media experts have changed as well. I remember that ten years ago, the recommendation of the American Academy of Pediatrics was no screen time at all for children under elementary-school age, with slightly increasing allowances for older children. There were – and still are – legitimate concerns about how the way the human brain interacts with screens can impact the growth and development of very young children. But we are also learning that that impact can be positive as well as negative.
Today, so much of the information we need and the entertainment we crave comes to us digitally, and so the discussion has shifted; it seems that most professional researchers are assuming that even young children will consume digital media, with or against their recommendations, and are encouraging families to guide their children’s digital media use intentionally. I think this can be done to the benefit of the child’s development, in the context of the needs of the family.
I’d like to offer these tips for developing a digital media mindset that works for your family.
I feel that the major theme here is to make your choices intentionally. Research apps, think about how you select your media tools, know your child’s response to media use, and make conscious choices. Rather than feeling scolded for letting your child play on your phone, I hope you will read these thoughts as being guidelines for picking quality, participatory, enjoyable digital tools for your family, and for using them in a way that benefits all of you. You know your child, your family, and your needs – your digital media use can enhance all of those things.
And Mom, when you’re cooking dinner and you let your kids watch Dora or play Angry Birds on the iPad because that’s what makes that hour go a bit smoother – don’t apologize for it. You’re doing just fine.
“For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the Lord, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.”- Jeremiah 29:11
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