5 Top Takeaways From the Hunt Institute鈥檚 Technology in Early Childhood Discussion
Top Takeaways is a series of recaps from important conversations, town halls, webinars and virtual events about early learning.
This summer, the Hunt Institute hosted a panel discussion on the risks and opportunities that technology presents in the lives of young children. Experts shared their insights on how caregivers can best approach digital media consumption and tools for children in an increasingly digital world.
Here are our top five takeaways:
1. We all rely on screens. For better and worse, 鈥淧eople use screens because it鈥檚 an easy way to keep kids occupied and safe when they need to get other things done,鈥 Dr. Deborah Rosenfeld of the explained. Speaking from personal experience, she emphasized that this 鈥渋s not a unique problem of income that leads to people using screens as babysitters.鈥
While technology became ubiquitous during the Covid pandemic, using digital media to distract and entertain young children is not ideal, especially if it interferes with play and learning opportunities.
2. Consider the timing and type of digital media exposure. Kris Perry, executive director of , said, 鈥淔or all young children, high amounts of screen time, especially without adult guidance or as a passive pursuit, is unambiguously detrimental to their learning and development. It鈥檚 not until the second year of life that there is any evidence that children benefit from media for learning, and even that requires direct facilitation and reteaching from an adult.鈥
Fundamental skills and abilities develop during early childhood. Greater screen time in infancy, Perry said, can lead to lower attention and executive function at nine years old.鈥 Research shows physical and social-emotional impacts as well.
3. Technology should not displace playful learning. Screen time correlates with poorer social and language development. 鈥淲e came into being with optimization for being around other people and with this physical world,鈥 explained Dr. Victor Lee of Stanford University鈥檚 . 鈥淥ur hardware is best treated and fine-tuned within that space.鈥
The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommends children ages one to five get at least 60 minutes a day of moderate to vigorous physical activity, and panelists agree that screen time should not interfere. 鈥淪creen time displacement for peer play relates to worse fine and gross motor skills for one- to three-year-olds,鈥 Perry said, endorsing the AAP guidelines.
4. High-quality educational digital resources are scarce. Parents and caregivers must use caution in the media that children consume. Lee compared the prevalence of new technology to the processed food revolution, which made cheap, easily distributed foods widely available. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 mean that it is as healthy, desirable or should be replacing what we have elsewhere,鈥 he argued.
Rosenfeld recommended and as reputable resources for finding developmentally appropriate content for children. Perry recommends that caregivers refer to (from Kathy Hirsh-Pasek and others) when discerning if a digital media resource has the potential to promote learning.
Even with high-quality digital-based content, Lee said, 鈥淚t is not there to, nor is it ever going to be capable of replacing what humans do, especially concerning how we support the development, growth and autonomy of our kids.鈥
5. Synchronous learning and healthy modeling should be prioritized. 鈥淪ynchronicity is a caregiver sitting beside a child watching a show, playing a game,鈥 Rosenfeld explained. That is not the typical situation. She suggests incorporating methods to mediate learning, like discussing key concepts, ideas and character interactions, which are critical when incorporating digital media and resources asynchronously.
Perry stressed that caregivers should 鈥渞emember what the long-term effects are on children, not only directly when they鈥檙e on devices, but watching adults be on devices are also interrupting their opportunities to develop.鈥
This story originally published on Early Learning Nation and is now archived on 蜜桃影视. Learn more here.