Weekly help for parents of teenagers.
Thursday, December 11, 2003
A recent nation-wide study by the Canadian Teachers
Federation indicates that the majority of parents do not exert any
control on what television shows and movies their kids watch or what
video games they play. According to this study, by Grade 7
three-quarters of the kids surveyed had watched R-rated movies on video
or DVD. One-quarter of these youngsters had actually rented R-rated
movies themselves. Similar figures applied to the video games they
play. By grade 7 amost 75 percent of the parents did not tell their
children what games they could or could not play.
Other studies provide similarly alarming results.
Recent surveys by organizations such as the US Federal Trade Commision
indicate that a typical American child spends an average of more than
38 hours a week using these entertainment media. That's a full working
week for most adults. The FTC review indicates that the majority of
research into the impact of media violence on children finds that there
is a high correlation between exposure to media violence and aggressive
and sometimes violent behavior. The Canadian Teacher's Federation study
confirms these results as it found that half the students in Grades 7
to 10 had witnessed peers imitate a violent scene from a movie or
television show or copy a dangerous stunt.
Three points are obvious from the research;
children are spending a huge proportion of their time using electronic
media, the media are having negative effects on our
children and parents are not monitoring and controlling what is being
watched and played by their children. There are major implications to
these conclusions. They range from developing a generation of more
aggressive, violent and sexually active children to contributing to the
growing problem of obesity in children by allowing their major leisure
time activities to be sedentary ones.
Parents need to set controls on what their children
watch and play and how long they are using these media. That means they
have to know the content of the programs and movies their children
watch and of the games they are playing, then refuse to allow any that
they feel are inappropriate. It takes time and effort for parents to
impose these controls but if they don't it is becoming increasingly
obvious that the impact on this generation of children may be
disastrous.
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© Copyright 2004 Dr. G. Scott Wooding.