Table of contents:
- Most parents believe that they are good role models
- This is the impact if parents play cellphones while raising children
- Children also tend to have behavioral and emotional disorders
Are you the type of person who can not get away from smartphone? Whether it's because of work or just checking social media, parents who are constantly checking their cellphones have a negative impact on the development of their child's behavior. So, don't be busy playing cellphones while raising children.
Most parents believe that they are good role models
Indeed, not all parents are busy with gadgettime with the child. However, we also cannot deny that in this day and age, cellphones and other virtual world technologies often "snatch" someone from the reality around them, including their own children.
This was also reported by the Common Sense research media survey. The survey involved more than 1,700 parents who have children aged 8 to 18 years. From a Common Sense search, it was found that parents spend approximately nine hours in front of a screen per day. This includes playing on a cellphone while babysitting a child, with most of the time spent browsing his personal social media. Meanwhile, approximately 90 minutes are spent on work.
The results of the study also explained that 78 percent of parents felt confident that they were role models aka a good role model for their children. In contrast, as reported by Tirto, 56 percent of parents worry that their children are addicted to gadgets and technology, while the remaining 34 percent think that technology can have a negative impact on their children's growth and development.
According to James P. Steyer, founder and CEO of Common Sense said the findings are very interesting, parents and children alike use gadget and technology for their entertainment, but on the other hand parents also express concerns about addictiongadget for her children.
This is the impact if parents play cellphones while raising children
Information and other activities in cyberspace do not always have a negative effect on its users. This was shared by 94 percent of parents in the same survey. They claim that technology has benefits for their children. As many as 44 percent of parents even feel that gadget can help build friendships for her children.
The same reason also motivates parents to remain loyal to their various activities and activities in cyberspace. However, recent research has shown a link between use gadgetwith the potential for less harmonious relationships between parents and children.
Brandon T. McDaniel in a study in the journal Child Development stated that bad children's behavior is related to the time spent by parents in playing gadget, including playing cellphones when parenting children. McDaniel, a researcher from Illinois State University in the United States, calls the disorder a technoference.
The study involved 170 two-parent families, and researchers asked mothers and fathers to complete a questionnaire separately. Nearly half of parents surveyed (48 percent) said that technology distracts them from their children at least three times a day. Meanwhile, 24 percent of parents think cellphones interfere with their interactions with children up to two times a day.
Meanwhile, about 17 percent of parents rated it gadgetdisturbing family time. However, it turns out that only 11 percent of parents are willing to distance themselves from cell phones, tablets, laptops, tablets and computers when spending time with their children.
Children also tend to have behavioral and emotional disorders
Impact gadget to Children's behavior is also described in research Laura Birks from the Barcelona Institute for Global Health, Spain in the journal Environmental International.
Laura conducted research on 83,884 pairs of mothers and children in Spain, Denmark, Norway, the Netherlands, and Korea. Laura found that children whose mothers often spend time on their cell phones or are busy playing on their cellphones while raising children are at risk of behavioral and emotional disturbances.
In addition, Laura and her colleagues also found that a child born to a mother who made phone calls more than four times a day had a 28 percent chance of growing up to be hyperactive.
Responding to this, Larry Rosen, professor emeritus at California State University, Dominguez Hills advises parents to limit the duration of playing cellphones while parenting.
Rosen stated that children will absorb what they see. In addition, they will also learn and form relationships from their parents' behavior. Constantly checking your cell phone or playing on it while parenting will have a negative impact on your relationship with your child.
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