On The Air This Week, We're Exploring Digital Childhood
by ELISE HU
October 28, 2013 7:01 AM
This week, we'll explore the touch-screen generation.
Alex Couros/Flickr
We are really excited to start a new team-centered,
theme-driven reporting effort. ("We" refers to your NPR tech
reporting team — Steve Henn and Laura Sydell out in the Bay Area, and me, here
at NPR's headquarters in Washington.)
As much as we can, we will craft our tech and culture
coverage around a certain theme each week, meaning each of us will report one
story as part of the theme and you'll hear those stories on our flagship shows.
At the conclusion of each week, they'll get mashed into a whimsical podcast you
can download.
Raising Digital Natives: Technology And Our Kids
For our first attempt at a theme week, we chose
"raising digital natives," or, more simply, technology and our kids.
It's especially good timing — the American Academy of Pediatrics this
morningreleased new guidelines on whether parents should allow screen time,
updating previous rules for the touch screen generation.
And the nonprofit Common Sense Media is out with new numbers
showing that among children under age 2, 38 percent had used mobile devices
like iPhones and tablets. For children 8 and under, the average amount of time
they spend using mobile devices has tripled since a similar survey two years
ago.
The comedian Louis C.K.'s rant about parents, kids and
cellphones hits on some of the struggles:
Team Coco/YouTube
Louis C.K.'s rant against kids and cellphones.
What struck us was how well Louis C.K. expressed his fears
about what all this technology was doing to his kids. So many of us are trying to
help kids navigate this stuff. So this week, we want to have a conversation
with you through our stories on the air and here on the blog.
If you're a parent or a kid, or a friend of a parent or a
kid or were a kid once — we are going on a ride through a digital childhood. On
the air, I'll be reporting on babies and screen time — how early is too early?
Steve Henn will explore the complex design thinking behind your kid's favorite
video games, and Laura Sydell takes a closer look at ask.fm, which critics fear
is making it easier for teens to be bullied online.
But we want to hear from you: What's your approach to
technology and your children? What do you want to learn more about when it
comes to the way children and teens are coming of age in our tech-obsessed
culture?
There's likely much more material to be mined, so help us
shape what our reporting will look like. Email me, leave a message in the
comments or tweet us @NPRAllTech.
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