Sara*, a mother of a three-year-old, would often give her son an iPad to use but didn’t realise how much it was affecting his mood. “I noticed that my son was becoming extremely fidgety, moody and prone to frequent tantrums, but I thought that it was a phase,” she says.
Soon after, however, the iPad at home broke down and wasn’t fixed for a while; Sara says she noticed a radical change in her child’s behaviour within a week. “He was sleeping better, eating better, finally appreciating the mountain of toys that lay around him and generally became a much more congenial child,” she points out.
Many parents like Sara often give children electronic gadgets to play with, and indeed, if you are a parent or know one, there’s no denying the fact that children today are surrounded by and frequently use all kinds of electronic devices, from personal computers and laptops to handheld video games, tablets and smartphones, etc. Some would even say this use borders on addiction.
And such an addiction to electronic gadgets can negatively impact the social development of children. According to research conducted by the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), children who frequently use screen-based devices fail to develop basic social skills. They are unable to communicate effectively in person and seek the comfort of a screen barrier. Neither do they display adequate facial expressions, nor do they recognise them on other people.
As more research and studies such as UCLA’s show the negative effects of children having so much screen time, the need to reduce the use of electronic gadgets becomes all the more urgent. Parents, however, often become complacent about this and even encourage it as a way of keeping up with the progressing world. In certain cases, parents rely heavily on these devices to ‘babysit’ the children while they take care of errands or work.
Studies and anecdotal evidence suggest that frequent use of electronic gadgets by
children can affect their social and mental development
Though timely introduction of all gadgets is a good idea, problems occur when too much is made accessible too early with little or no monitoring. Shazia Umar, a psychotherapist who works closely with school children, says, “Screens are like sugar. If you actively encourage a child to find comfort in screens, (s)he will grow up conditioned to this thought process and will develop a feeling of incompetency in its absence, just like children who are fed a lot of sugar in early years develop sugar cravings as they grow older.”
She suggests that if a toddler is upset, then instead of resorting to the most convenient solution of using a readily available smartphone or tablet to pacify the child, one should try other options such as outdoor play, creative work, art activities, books, etc.