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Plugged in Parenting

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unschoolbus
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« on: August 31, 2010, 11:41:55 am »

Good Article http://tidewaterschool.blogspot.com/

New York Times

By JULIE SCELFO

WHILE waiting for an elevator at the Fair Oaks Mall near her home in Virginia recently, Janice Im, who works in early-childhood development, witnessed a troubling incident between a young boy and his mother.

The boy, who Ms. Im estimates was about 2 1/2 years old, made repeated attempts to talk to his mother, but she wouldn’t look up from her BlackBerry. “He’s like: ‘Mama? Mama? Mama?’ ” Ms. Im recalled. “And then he starts tapping her leg. And she goes: ‘Just wait a second. Just wait a second.’ ”

Finally, he was so frustrated, Ms. Im said, that “he goes, ‘Ahhh!’ and tries to bite her leg.”

Much of the concern about cellphones and instant messaging and Twitter has been focused on how children who incessantly use the technology are affected by it. But parents’ use of such technology — and its effect on their offspring — is now becoming an equal source of concern to some child-development researchers.

Sherry Turkle, director of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Initiative on Technology and Self, has been studying how parental use of technology affects children and young adults. After five years and 300 interviews, she has found that feelings of hurt, jealousy and competition are widespread. Her findings will be published in “Alone Together” early next year by Basic Books.

In her studies, Dr. Turkle said, “Over and over, kids raised the same three examples of feeling hurt and not wanting to show it when their mom or dad would be on their devices instead of paying attention to them: at meals, during pickup after either school or an extracurricular activity, and during sports events.”

Dr. Turkle said that she recognizes the pressure adults feel to make themselves constantly available for work, but added that she believes there is a greater force compelling them to keep checking the screen.

“There’s something that’s so engrossing about the kind of interactions people do with screens that they wall out the world,” she said. “I’ve talked to children who try to get their parents to stop texting while driving and they get resistance, ‘Oh, just one, just one more quick one, honey.’ It’s like ‘one more drink.’ ”

Laura Scott Wade, the director of ethics for a national medical organization in Chicago, said that six months ago her son, Lincoln, then 3 1/2, got so tired of her promises to get off the computer in “just one more minute” that he resorted to the kind of tactic parents typically use.

“He makes me set the timer on the microwave,” Ms. Wade said. “And when it dings he’ll say, ‘Come on,’ and he’ll say, ‘Don’t bring your phone.’ ”

Not all child-development experts think smartphone and laptop use by parents is necessarily a bad thing, of course. Parents have always had to divide their attention, and researchers point out that there’s a difference between quantity and quality when it comes to conversations between parents and children.

“It sort of comes back to quality time, and distracted time is not high-quality time, whether parents are checking the newspaper or their BlackBerry,” said Frederick J. Zimmerman, a professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, School of Public Health who has studied how television can distract parents. He also noted that smartphones and laptops may enable some parents to spend more time at home, which may, in turn, result in more, rather than less, quality time overall.

There is little research on how parents’ constant use of such technology affects children, but experts say there is no question that engaged parenting — talking and explaining things to children, and responding to their questions — remains the bedrock of early childhood learning.

Betty Hart and Todd R. Risley’s landmark 1995 book, “Meaningful Differences in the Everyday Experience of Young American Children,” shows that parents who supply a language-rich environment for their children help them develop a wide vocabulary, and that helps them learn to read.

The book connects language use at home with socioeconomic status. According to its findings, children in higher socioeconomic homes hear an average of 2,153 words an hour, whereas those in working-class households hear only about 1,251; children in the study whose parents were on welfare heard an average of 616 words an hour.

The question is: Will devices like smartphones change that? Smartphone users tend to have higher incomes; research from the Nielsen Company shows that they are twice as likely to make more than $100,000 a year than the average mobile subscriber. If increased use of technology encroaches on the time that well-to-do families spend communicating with their children, some could become the victims of successes originally thought to help them.

Dr. Hart, who is now professor emeritus at the University of Kansas Life Span Institute, said that more research is needed to find out whether the constant use of smartphones and other technology is interfering with parent-child communications. But she expressed hope that more parents would consider how their use of electronic devices might be limiting their ability to meet their children’s needs.

Part of the reason the children in affluent homes she studied developed larger vocabularies by the time they were 3 is that “parents are holding kids, the kids are on their lap while the parent is reading a book,” Dr. Hart said. “It is important for parents to know when they’re talking to kids, they’re transferring affection as well as words. When you talk to people, there’s always an implicit message, ‘I like you,’ or ‘I don’t like you.’ ”

Meredith Sinclair, a mother and blogger in Wilmette, Ill., said she had no idea how what she calls her “addiction to e-mail and social media Web sites” was bothering her children until she established an e-mail and Internet ban between 4 and 8 p.m., and her children responded with glee. “When I told them, my 12-year-old, Maxwell, was like, ‘Yes!’ ” Ms. Sinclair said.

“You can’t really do both,” she added. “If I’m at all connected, it’s too tempting. I need to make a distinct choice.”
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unschoolbus
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« Reply #1 on: August 31, 2010, 11:46:40 am »

Personally, I find that if I am online I have less patience with Bryson and I am more adapt to snap at him or brush him off. I am working on not being plugged in or reading. I am spending more time either knitting or actively seeking an activity that he can participate in. It's hard on my because there is always something I feel I should be doing online.
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« Reply #2 on: August 31, 2010, 03:03:56 pm »

Yes.  And here I am breaking my internet during the day ban.  Bad mommy.
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Kellie
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« Reply #3 on: August 31, 2010, 08:41:20 pm »

The easiest way to stay unplugged is to leave the house. It is really the best way.
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« Reply #4 on: August 31, 2010, 09:46:13 pm »

I do pretty well most days.  I've found that having another objective or plan helps me.  If I stay in motion, I do better.
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Kellie
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« Reply #5 on: September 04, 2010, 11:18:14 am »

I just don't function well at home. I do pretty well when we are on the road about not being tied down but I do take my net book and have it for a stop every week or so to deal with my e-mail inbox. I check my e-mail while Bry play at a McDonald's play area. This is partially for my sanity because if I leave my in box for too long it gets way over run and I am unable to deal with anything in it.
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« Reply #6 on: September 04, 2010, 11:39:09 am »

The boy, who Ms. Im estimates was about 2 1/2 years old, made repeated attempts to talk to his mother, but she wouldn’t look up from her BlackBerry. “He’s like: ‘Mama? Mama? Mama?’ ” Ms. Im recalled. “And then he starts tapping her leg. And she goes: ‘Just wait a second. Just wait a second.’ ”

Okay, this is nothing new to the electronic age. I specifically remember conversations like this with my mom, who still to this day can't send a new text from her phone and can barely log onto the computer.....but instead she was reading or crocheting. So it makes me feel not so bad that moms through the generations have tuned out their kids and it's not just a problem new to me and my computer.  Tongue
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« Reply #7 on: September 04, 2010, 12:03:57 pm »

I see it more now then I did 5 years ago.
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« Reply #8 on: September 04, 2010, 09:34:48 pm »

I think that we "see" it more now because most people wouldn't be standing at the mall, waiting for an elevator and knitting to beat the band while ignoring the kids.  Having technology at your fingertips all the time makes it much easier to check out.  Like right now, I'm ignoring my family.  Wink
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« Reply #9 on: September 04, 2010, 09:41:29 pm »

I think that we "see" it more now because most people wouldn't be standing at the mall, waiting for an elevator and knitting to beat the band while ignoring the kids.  Having technology at your fingertips all the time makes it much easier to check out.  Like right now, I'm ignoring my family.  Wink

Yep. I'm somewhat ignoring my family as well. Though considering he has built a battering ram and is doing practice runs into boxes I guess I should probably make sure no one gets impaled. Wink
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Mom to Bryson 12-7-03
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