Parents today are the first generation to raise kids in a world dominated by screens. Our parents ordered us to turn off the TV and stop yammering on the telephone — but such struggles seem easy compared to the battles today鈥檚 parents face, with TV, the internet, and smartphones available anywhere and everywhere — and never very far from our kids鈥 hot little hands.
What effect does all this screen time have on kids鈥 academics? Many parents and experts have suspected that the effects aren鈥檛 good and now there鈥檚 hard evidence to prove it. A three-year research project, known as 鈥淭he Learning Habit Study,鈥 identified a direct link between screen time and declining grades.
Think this study only pertains to young screen addicts? Hardly. Even just half an hour of screen time a day caused grades to fall. Four hours of screen time a day caused kids鈥 GPAs to fall by an entire grade. (This seems like a lot until you consider that American kids average seven hours of screen time per day.)
The study of 46,000 American households was conducted by a team of researchers from Brown, Brandeis, Children鈥檚 National Medical Center, and New England Center for Pediatric Psychology; it was published in the , and in a book called . The study also found that kids who spent more time on screens were less able to persist at difficult tasks and exhibited more emotional volatility than those who engaged in less screen time.
Now that the evidence is in, what should parents do? The study authors suggest parents make a conscious effort to balance screen time with chores, activities, and family time — dinners, game nights, and outings, for example. Kids won鈥檛 be the only ones to benefit, since most adults I know (including me) spend a good part of each day glued to a screen, too. So make a family meal, wash the dishes together, take your kids for a walk, get out the board games, and make a night of it. I鈥檓 right behind you (as soon as I finish this post, check my email, and return a few texts!)