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- <text id=90TT2714>
- <title>
- Oct. 15, 1990: Is TV Ruining Our Children?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Oct. 15, 1990 High Anxiety
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- VIDEO, Page 75
- Is TV Ruining Our Children?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Reforms are at hand, but the way kids grow up has already been
- profoundly changed
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD ZOGLIN--Reported by William Tynan/New York
- </p>
- <p> Behold every parent's worst nightmare: the six-year-old TV
- addict. He watches in the morning before he goes off to school,
- plops himself in front of the set as soon as he gets home in
- the afternoon and gets another dose to calm down before he goes
- to bed at night. He wears Bart Simpson T-shirts, nags Mom to
- buy him Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles toys and spends hours
- glued to his Nintendo. His teacher says he is restless and
- combative in class. What's more, he's having trouble reading.
- </p>
- <p> Does this creature really exist, or is he just a paranoid
- video-age vision? The question is gaining urgency as the medium
- barges ever more aggressively into children's lives. Except for
- school and the family, no institution plays a bigger role in
- shaping American children. And no institution takes more heat.
- TV has been blamed for just about everything from a decrease
- in attention span to an increase in street crime. Cartoons are
- attacked for their violence and sitcoms for their foul
- language. Critics ranging from religious conservatives to
- consumer groups like Action for Children's Television have kept
- up a steady drumbeat of calls for reform.
- </p>
- <p> Last week Congress took a small step toward obliging.
- Legislators sent to President Bush a bill that would set limits
- on commercial time in children's programming (a still generous
- 10 1/2 minutes per hour on weekends and 12 minutes on
- weekdays). The bill would also require stations to air at least
- some educational kids' fare as a condition for getting their
- licenses renewed. Bush has argued that the bill infringes on
- broadcasters' First Amendment rights, but (unlike President
- Reagan, who vetoed a similar measure two years ago) he is
- expected to allow it to become law.
- </p>
- <p> Yet these mild efforts at reform, as well as critics'
- persistent gripes about the poor quality of children's TV,
- skirt the central issue. Even if the commercialism on kidvid
- were reined in, even if local stations were persuaded to air
- more "quality" children's fare, even if kids could be shielded
- from the most objectionable material, the fact remains that
- children watch a ton of TV. Almost daily, parents must grapple
- with a fundamental, overriding question: What is all that TV
- viewing doing to kids, and what can be done about it?
- </p>
- <p> Television has, of course, been an inseparable companion for
- most American youngsters since the early 1950s. But the baby
- boomers, who grew up with Howdy Doody and Huckleberry Hound,
- experienced nothing like the barrage of video images that
- pepper kids today. Cable has vastly expanded the supply of
- programming. The VCR has turned favorite shows and movies into
- an endlessly repeatable pastime. Video games have added to the
- home box's allure.
- </p>
- <p> The average child will have watched 5,000 hours of TV by the
- time he enters first grade and 19,000 hours by the end of high
- school--more time than he will spend in class. This
- dismayingly passive experience crowds out other, more active
- endeavors: playing outdoors, being with friends, reading. Marie
- Winn, author of the 1977 book The Plug-In Drug, gave a
- memorable, if rather alarmist, description of the trancelike
- state TV induces: "The child's facial expression is
- transformed. The jaw is relaxed and hangs open slightly; the
- tongue rests on the front teeth (if there are any). The eyes
- have a glazed, vacuous look..."
- </p>
- <p> Guided by TV, today's kids are exposed to more information
- about the world around them than any other generation in
- history. But are they smarter for it? Many teachers and
- psychologists argue that TV is largely to blame for the decline
- in reading skills and school performance. In his studies of
- children at Yale, psychologist Jerome Singer found that kids
- who are heavy TV watchers tend to be less well informed, more
- restless and poorer students. The frenetic pace of TV,
- moreover, has seeped into the classroom. "A teacher who is
- going into a lengthy explanation of an arithmetic problem will
- begin to lose the audience after a while," says Singer.
- "Children are expecting some kind of show." Even the much
- beloved Sesame Street has been criticized for reinforcing the
- TV-inspired notion that education must be fast paced and
- entertaining. Says Neil Postman, communications professor at
- New York University and author of Amusing Ourselves to Death:
- "Sesame Street makes kids like school only if school is like
- Sesame Street."
- </p>
- <p> Televised violence may also be having an effect on
- youngsters. Singer's research has shown that prolonged viewing
- by children of violent programs is associated with more
- aggressive behavior, such as getting into fights and disrupting
- the play of others. (A link between TV and violent crime,
- however, has not been clearly established.) Other studies
- suggest that TV viewing can dampen kids' imagination. Patricia
- Marks Greenfield, a professor of psychology at UCLA, conducted
- experiments in which several groups of children were asked to
- tell a story about the Smurfs. Those who were shown a Smurfs
- TV cartoon beforehand were less "creative" in their
- storytelling than kids who first played an unrelated
- connect-the-dots game.
- </p>
- <p> But the evidence is flimsy for many popular complaints about
- TV. In a 1988 report co-authored for the U.S. Department of
- Education, Daniel Anderson, professor of psychology at the
- University of Massachusetts in Amherst, found no convincing
- evidence that TV has a "mesmerizing effect" on children,
- overstimulates them or reduces their attention span. In fact,
- the report asserted, TV may actually increase attention-focusing
- capabilities.
- </p>
- <p> Nor, contrary to many parents' fears, have the new video
- technologies made matters worse. Small children who repeatedly
- watch their favorite cassettes are, psychologists point out,
- behaving no differently from toddlers who want their favorite
- story read to them over and over. (The VCR may actually give
- parents more control over their kids' viewing.) Video games may
- distress adults with their addictive potential, but researchers
- have found no exceptional harm in them--and even some
- possible benefits, like improving hand-eye coordination.
- </p>
- <p> Yet TV may be effecting a more profound, if less widely
- recognized, change in the whole concept of growing up. Before
- the advent of television, when print was the predominant form
- of mass communication, parents and teachers were able to
- control just what and when children learned about the world
- outside. With TV, kids are plunged into that world almost
- instantly.
- </p>
- <p> In his 1985 book, No Sense of Place, Joshua Meyrowitz,
- professor of communication at the University of New Hampshire,
- points out that TV reveals to children the "backstage" activity
- of adults. Even a seemingly innocuous program like Father Knows
- Best showed that parents aren't all-knowing authority figures:
- they agonize over problems in private and sometimes even
- conspire to fool children. "Television exposes kids to behavior
- that adults spent centuries trying to hide from children," says
- Meyrowitz. "The average child watching television sees adults
- hitting each other, killing each other, breaking down and
- crying. It teaches kids that adults don't always know what
- they're doing." N.Y.U.'s Postman believes TV, by revealing the
- "secrets" of adulthood, has virtually destroyed the notion of
- childhood as a discrete period of innocence. "What I see
- happening is a blurring of childhood and adulthood," he says.
- "We have more adultlike children and more childlike adults."
- </p>
- <p> What all this implies is that TV's impact is pervasive and
- to a large extent inevitable. That impact cannot be wished
- away; all that can be done is to try to understand and control
- it. Reforms of the sort Congress has enacted are a salutary
- step. Networks and stations too--though they are in the
- business of entertainment, not education--must be vigilant
- about the content and commercialization of kids' shows.
- </p>
- <p> The ultimate responsibility still rests with parents. The
- goal should not be--cannot be--to screen out every bad word
- or karate chop from kids' viewing, but rather to make sure TV
- doesn't crowd out all the other activities that are part of
- growing up. These counterbalancing influences--family,
- friends, school, books--can put TV, if not out of the
- picture, at least in the proper focus.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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-