Parents' smartphone use around children has a negative effect on kids

Publish date: 2022-09-22

TL;DR

Back in May, we told you about a pair of studies which suggested parents’ smartphone use distracts them from connecting with their children.  While the results of the study seemed fairly obvious, the effects of smartphones on children are relatively unknown from a scientific standpoint, and more research is needed.

Now, we have even more studies which suggest parents ignoring their children to do things on their smartphone can have profoundly negative effects on their kids’ emotional states — and we also have anecdotal evidence which suggests the children themselves are noticing.

USA Today, for example, published a story earlier this year about a group of second graders tasked with writing a paragraph or two about an invention they wish had never been created. Four of the students in the class chose smartphones as their vote for humanity’s most regrettable invention, with one child writing, “I don’t like the phone because my [parents] are on their phone every day…I hate my mom’s phone and I wish she never had one.”

The teacher who developed the writing prompt shared that child’s paper on Facebook, where it quickly garnered over 250,000 shares (the post is now set to private).

Study: Smartphones distract parents from connecting with their children

News

In addition, researchers from a pair of United States universities published a study in the journal Child Development which suggests parents’ smartphone usage is correlated with their children “acting out” in bids for attention.

Professionals agree that eliminating smartphones is not the answer, but is rather an awareness and moderation.

The problem, of course, is parents love using their phones, and use them to feel connected to their friends, family, and the world at large. There’s also the idea of instant gratification and dopamine rushes one gets when receiving new notifications, winning a mobile game, or publishing a particularly witty social media post. It’s hard to pull yourself away from all that to watch your child push a toy car around the floor or answer an endless stream of childish questions.

10 best kids apps for Android to keep your kids entertained

Apps

In many ways, Google’s Digital Wellbeing initiative is a potential solution to this problem. Myself, I used Digital Wellbeing for a few weeks and found it to be life-altering. When you really see — in real time — just how much of your day is spent on your phone, it’s quite the wake-up call. I don’t have children so I don’t have to keep that in mind with my smartphone use, but parents out there should do their best to use the Digital Wellbeing service as soon as possible. Those of you out there with iPhones also have access to some new tools within iOS 12 that could be useful in this regard.

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