Huffington Post The American Academy of Pediatrics and the Canadian Society of Pediatrics state
infants aged 0-2 years should not have any exposure to technology, 3-5
years be restricted to one hour per day, and 6-18 years restricted to 2
hours per day (AAP 2001/13, CPS 2010). Children and youth use 4-5 times
the recommended amount of technology, with serious and often life
threatening consequences (Kaiser Foundation 2010, Active Healthy Kids
Canada 2012). Handheld devices (cell phones, tablets, electronic games)
have dramatically increased the accessibility and usage
of technology, especially by very young children (Common Sense Media,
2013). As a pediatric occupational therapist, I'm calling on parents,
teachers and governments to ban the use of all handheld devices for
children under the age of 12 years. Following are 10 research-based
reasons for this ban. Please visit zonein.ca to view the Zone'in Fact Sheet for referenced research.
1. Rapid brain growth
Between 0 and 2 years, infant's brains triple in size, and continue in a state of rapid development to 21 years of age (Christakis 2011). Early brain development is determined by environmental stimuli, or lack thereof. Stimulation to a developing brain caused by overexposure to technologies (cell phones, internet, iPads, TV), has been shown to be associated with executive functioning and attention deficit, cognitive delays, impaired learning, increased impulsivity and decreased ability to self-regulate, e.g. tantrums (Small 2008, Pagini 2010).
Between 0 and 2 years, infant's brains triple in size, and continue in a state of rapid development to 21 years of age (Christakis 2011). Early brain development is determined by environmental stimuli, or lack thereof. Stimulation to a developing brain caused by overexposure to technologies (cell phones, internet, iPads, TV), has been shown to be associated with executive functioning and attention deficit, cognitive delays, impaired learning, increased impulsivity and decreased ability to self-regulate, e.g. tantrums (Small 2008, Pagini 2010).
2. Delayed Development
Technology use restricts movement, which can result in delayed development. One in three children now enter school developmentally delayed, negatively impacting literacy and academic achievement (HELP EDI Maps 2013). Movement enhances attention and learning ability (Ratey 2008). Use of technology under the age of 12 years is detrimental to child development and learning (Rowan 2010). [...]
Technology use restricts movement, which can result in delayed development. One in three children now enter school developmentally delayed, negatively impacting literacy and academic achievement (HELP EDI Maps 2013). Movement enhances attention and learning ability (Ratey 2008). Use of technology under the age of 12 years is detrimental to child development and learning (Rowan 2010). [...]
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