Title: Digital Childhood:
1Digital Childhood
- Electronic Media in Young Childrens Lives
- Elizabeth A. Vandewater
- Public Health and Environment
- Research Triangle Institute
2Funding
- Primary Funding
- National Science Foundation (BCS-0623856)
- IRADS Collaborative Research Influences of
Digital Media on Very Young Children
- Other Sources of Funding
- The Kaiser Family Foundation
- Monitoring Young Childrens Technology Use
- Brainy Baby Corporation
- Video as a Teaching Tool for Infants and
Toddlers
- Disney Corporation
- Infant Video Viewing and Language Development
3Young Childrens Media Landscape in the
Millennium 2000
- Children use electronic media 2-5 hours daily
- More time with television than any other single
activity except sleep
- Explosion of products marketed to the very young
- Baby Einstein, Baby Mozart
- Computer Lapware
- Preschool Video Games
- Yet, we knew relatively little about the impact
of this use.
- Vast majority of existing work focused on older
children
4Rising Concerns
- American Academy of Pediatrics (2001)
- No screen time children
- No more than 2 hours daily after that
- Childrens bedrooms should be TV free
- Recommendations based on scant empirical evidence
5Digital childhood Electronic media use among
infants, toddlers and preschoolers
- Vandewater, E. A., Rideout, V., Wartella, E. A.,
Huang, X., Lee, J. H., Shim, M. (2007).
Pediatrics, 119, e1006-e1015
6Research Questions
- How much media do young children (0-6) use?
- How much access to media do they have in the
home?
- How many young children fall within the American
Academy of Pediatrics media-use guidelines?
7Sample
- Survey of 1051 parents of children aged 6 months
to 6 years selected by random-digit telephone
dialing.
- Response rate 33
- Calls staggered over times of day and days of the
week.
- Vast majority (81) of respondents were mothers.
- Ethnicity
- 60 non-Hispanic white, 14 Black, 20 as
Hispanic/Latino, 6 other
- Annual Income
- 6 10 000 or less, 10 10 000-19 999, 13 20
000-29 999, 21 30 000-49 000, 18 of 50
000-74 999, 11 75 000-99 999, and 11 100
000 or more - Family Structure
- 76 two-parent family home, 23 single-parent
family home
8How much media do young children use?
9How much access to media do they have in the
home?
10Parents reasons for putting TV in their young
childs bedroom
11How many young children fall within the AAP
media-use guidelines?
12Conclusions
- Young children growing up in a media saturated
environment
- Media and technology part of the fabric of their
daily lives
- Few parents follow the AAP Guidelines
- Consequences Developmental Implications?
13Video as a Teaching Tool for Infants and Toddlers
- Can Babies Learn from Commercially Available
Video?
14Two Studies
- Can infants and toddlers learn a novel shape from
video?
- Brainy Baby Shapes Colors
- Does viewing a language based infant video impact
infant language development?
- Baby Einstein Baby Wordsworth First words
around the house
15Can infants learn a novel shape from commercial
video?
- Assessing the Educational Impact of Brainy Baby
- (under review, Journal of Media and Children)
16Study Design
- Post-test only design
- Novel shape the crescent
- Randomly assigned to one of two conditions
- Experimental (n 32) 10 minutes with Brainy
Babys Baby Shapes 1 DVD - lessons on circles,
squares, rectangles, triangles and crescents
- Control (n 26) 10 minutes with the same DVD
lessons on crescents replaced with video of toys
dancing
- Community Sample
- Austin, TX and surrounding areas
- Descriptive Statistics
- Age range 13 to 33 months Mean age 21.95
Months. (SD 5.21)
- Total N 58
- 57 Boys, 43 Girls
- Avg. Family Monthly Income 6,208
17Study DesignProcedure
- Children watched the video at home
- Parents were asked to show children the video a
minimum of 5 times per week for a three week
period
- Children were brought to the lab for testing
- Roughly 5 minute warm-up period
- 3 minute refresher video clip from the research
video
- Identifying shapes for the experimenter by
pointing them out in a picture book
-
18Major Findings
- Experimental group was 9 times more likely to
identify the crescent than the control group
- The same results hold for children who were 24
months or less
- No difference between the groups on childrens
ability to identify any other shapes
19Differences in shape recognition for whole sample
20Differences in shape recognition for children
under 24 months old
21Conclusions
- Findings suggest that young children can learn
from video, even children under the age of two
- Content is key when given content with a clear
educational curricula, young children can learn
from it
- Further research needed to examine if children
learn some things better from video than others
22The Effect of Video on Infant Word Learning
- Assessing the educational impact of
- Baby Einstein
23Background
- Virtually all infant videos claim to be
educational
- When asked how they know Children like it
- Current literature on the impact of video on
language development is mixed
- Some have found that word learning from video is
possible (Krcmar, Grela, Lin, 2007 Linebarger
Walker, 2005)
- Some have found no relationship (DeLoache et al.,
under review Robb, Richert Wartella., in
press)
- Still others have found negative relationships
(Chonchaiya Pruksananonda, 2008 Zimmerman et
al., 2007)
24Our Question
- Given that only 30 of children under age of 2
follow AAP guidelines
- Does viewing language based, commercially
available infant video harm, not harm, or foster
infant language development?
- Harm - infants exposed to video should show fewer
language gains over time
- No harm - no difference in language gains over
time in children exposed
- Foster - infants exposed to video should show
greater language gains over time
25Study DesignCondition
- Randomly assigned to one of two conditions
- Experimental Group (n 126) Mailed a Baby
Wordsworth DVD and asked to show it to child at
least 2 times a week for next 4 weeks.
- Control Group (n 131) Given instructions to
keep child from being exposed to Baby Wordsworth
DVD over next 12 weeks.
26Experimental Longitudinal Design
- Age range 8 to 15 months at baseline (M11.24,
SD2.28)
- Sample drawn from online panel provided by Survey
Sampling International (SSI)
- Data collected via parental report on Web-based
surveys
- Descriptive Statistics
- Baseline N 453
- Analysis N 257 (completed all 3 waves 56
retention rate)
- 51 Boys, 48 Girls
- 81 White, 7 Black, 2 Latino, 4 Pacific
Islander, 6 Native American or Other
27Language Outcomes
- Receptive and Expressive Language
- Receptive Words understood
- Expressive Words spoken
- Communicative Development Inventory (CDI)
- 89 words understood / spoken vocabulary
checklist
- DVD words understood/spoken
- 10 words already included in CDI
- ball, book, chair, couch, cup, home, lamp,
kitchen, table, blanket
- 11 words exclusively in DVD
- bear, bed, bedroom, blocks, bowl, cat, puzzle,
refrigerator, telephone, tree, window
28Major Findings
- Children exposed to the video had a higher
receptive vocabulary (words understood) at the
end of the study
- The two groups did not differ on expressive
vocabulary (words spoken).
- Main reason the experimental group scored higher
on the CDI was because of the 10 words the CDI
shared with DVD script.
29OLS Regressions Receptive Language
30OLS Regressions Predicting Receptive Language at
Final Testing
31Mean Differences in CDI Words Understood Over
Time
Sig
n.s.
n.s.
MANCOVA Results Time Main effect, ? .96, F (2,
238) 4.01, p on, ? .97, F (2, 238) 2.81, p
32Mean Differences in DVD Words Understood Over
Time
Sig
n.s.
n.s.
MANCOVA Results Time Main effect, ? .97, F (2,
238) 3.05, p interaction, ? .97, F (2, 238) 3.03, P
33Conclusions
- Findings suggest that young children can learn
from video, even children under the age of two
- Content is key
- Language Development May take longer to become
evident than existing studies have run
34Digital Childhood
- Electronic Media in Young Childrens Lives
- Elizabeth A. Vandewater
- Public Health and Environment
- Research Triangle Institute