Some kindergartners are more likely to be heavy users of online tech later, according to new research
Too much screen time doesn't leave enough time for other important parts of growing up. Predicting which little kids will likely grow into heavy tech users could help target educational campaigns.
Paul L. Morgan, Eberly Fellow, Professor Education and Demography, and Director of the Center for Educational Disparities Research, Penn State •
conversation
Jan. 12, 2021 • ~7 min
Jan. 12, 2021 • ~7 min
education children social-media reading parenting child-development quick-reads research-brief screen-time behavior gaming screentime new-research online-technologies
Some kindergartners are more likely later to be heavy users of online tech, according to new research
Too much screen time doesn't leave enough time for other important parts of growing up. Predicting which little kids will likely grow into heavy tech users could help target educational campaigns.
Paul L. Morgan, Eberly Fellow, Professor Education and Demography, and Director of the Center for Educational Disparities Research, Penn State •
conversation
Jan. 12, 2021 • ~7 min
Jan. 12, 2021 • ~7 min
education children social-media reading parenting child-development quick-reads research-brief screen-time behavior gaming screentime new-research
Mobile technology may support kids learning to recognize emotions in photos of faces
Understanding others' emotions is a crucial social skill. Counter to concerns about screen time stunting kids' development, one study suggests they're getting better at recognizing emotion on screen.
Yalda T. Uhls, Founder and Executive Director of the Center for Scholars & Storytellers and Assistant Adjunct Professor in Psychology, University of California, Los Angeles •
conversation
June 2, 2020 • ~6 min
June 2, 2020 • ~6 min
emotion child-development research-brief emotions screen-time adolescents adolescence smart-phones screens ipad tablet-computing tablets screentime videochat
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