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That screen trust It’s something that needs to be done by throwing our children’s brains and bodies.
Before the outbreak, and especially for parents, doctors and researchers, they were able to convey a comforting, confusing, and even more confusing and confusing message. Screen time or technology is good for kids but also bad. It depends.
According to Dr. Colin Rousseau Johnson, a child development specialist and mother, it is a long time ago to avoid excessive and unrealistic views about children’s screen time. She told me that there are a few perfect things that children should not do or should not do with technology and the media. And it is important that caregivers, regardless of their choice, do not feel judged.
“We have to stop seeing this as a black and white issue,” said Dr. Rousse Johnson. “You don’t want your kids to always stick to screens. This is normal thinking. ” “But these things are not bad. There are many types, and not all are created equal. ”
Dr. Rousseau Johnson co-founded the children’s media and technology company, so she will benefit if parents believe screen time is good. But it is also one of the many voices calling for a rethinking of the negative perception of technology.
Dr. Rousseau Johnson said that the most serious messages about child technology are especially harmful to parents who may be screened. Playing outside may not be available or safe, and some parents want their children to be on the screen while carrying out work and other responsibilities.
“Everyone saw that fact for a moment,” said Dr. Rousseau Johnson. That has led many parents and researchers to realize that it is not always clear what “healthy balance” is for children on screen.
So how do we get rid of the notion that screen time leads young people into monsters and into a happy middle ground? Dr. Rousseau Johnson had some ways for parents to think about screen time – even though they are not rules. There are no rules! One of the questions parents may ask is, “How does this special device or screen, tech or feature improve or reduce the experience?” It says.
Dr. Rousseau Johnson caregivers can sometimes look for digital media or technology that encourages young children to be creative, such as going on a scam hunt or playing costumes on screen props.
She is a fan of apps from Toka Boca and Sago Mini that encourage little kids to explore open games without much guidance. Dr. Rousseau Johnson’s company, OK Play, makes children and their families the main characters in stories and games.
More important things, such as watching videos, are not all bad, she says. Whenever possible, parents should use the app to communicate with their children as they read a book or look at the screen, but not always. Single time is also good for children. Again, there are no rules!
If your children do not pay attention to what they do online, they may find some nasty Internet corners. But Dr. Rousse Johnson says children should not worry too much if they are in a safe digital world. On one occasion, she was showing videos of her 4-year-old daughter singing French songs, and she noticed that her daughter was walking away for a while, and that her daughter’s YouTube videos were playing games that were written with bad story lines.
Instead of leaving home, Dr. Rousseau Johnson says it’s important to ask yourself why a woman is attracted to those videos.
She realizes that there are no clear rules and that the amount of technology available to children can also be a burden. “With streaming and apps, anyone can publish anything, which puts more work on parents,” she said.
I asked the experts for advice and how many parents’ beliefs about children and technology were often focused on fear.
Dr. Rousseau Johnson said that these attitudes reflect the persistent anxiety in children and the ways in which we offer anything new.
“Child development research never happens at the speed of technology,” she said. “We’re going to make a decision based on fear. So a lot of people take the approach. If we don’t know for sure, then we should be bad and we should avoid it.” ”
Before we go…
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He is a major player in vaccine misinformation: My colleague Era Ra Franklin wrote about Joseph Osteopath, a Florida osteopath, because the researchers found that online misleading coronavirus information was the best choice. Dr. Mercola’s performance is enhanced by the distribution of vaccines online and the sale of books, organic yogurt and other products.
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Is the future cult on Facebook? Faith communities and social media are looking for more ways to incorporate religious life into Facebook, including features to host online services and request donations or registrations. My wife, Elizabeth Diaz, wrote that the Internet was a source of inspiration for religion, and a priest named Elizabeth said: “We want everyone to put their faces in another book.”
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The small bank in the corner The rest of the world is looking at the growth of small cash stores in Nigeria, where licensed banking agents have to withdraw cash, mobile payments and other people to move to bank branches in big cities.
To this embrace
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