Advertisement
5 diet mistakes
Still fat? DietDoc identifies five of the most common diet mistakes people make.
A cancer we can beat
Cervical cancer kills 250 000 women every year. We can eliminate it. Why don't we?
     TERMS     GET A DAILY HEALTH TIP  
  
MAKE HEALTH24 YOUR HOMEPAGE   
H24 NEWS MEDICAL SCHEMES DIET FITNESS NATURAL MAN WOMAN SEX PREGNANCY CHILD TEEN SUN
FOCUS CENTRES MEDS ORAL PET MIND GRAPHICS VIDEOS ANTI-AGEING WIN TOOLS EXPERTS TALK FIND

Links
 Healthy home
 Find a buddy
 Fitness
 Diet & Food
 Psychology

School
TV linked to lower marks
The effect of television on children has been debated ever since the first sets were turned on.

Now three new studies find that too much tube time can lower test scores, retard learning and even predict college performance.

 
Advertisement
The reports appear in the July issue of the Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine.

Similar findings in all three studies
In the first report, researchers studied the effect that having a TV in a child's bedroom can have on third graders. "We looked at the household media environment in relation to academic achievement on mathematics, reading and language arts tests," said study author Dina L.G. Borzekowski, an assistant professor at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

Borzekowski and her colleague, Dr Thomas Robinson of Stanford University, collected data on 386 third graders and their parents about how much TV the children watched, the number of TV sets, computers and video game consoles in the household and where they were. They also collected data on how much time the children spent using the different media, as well as the time spent doing homework and reading.

The researchers found that the media in the household, where it is and how it is used can have a profound effect on learning. "We found that the household media environment has a very close association with performance on the different test scores," Borzekowski said.

TV in the bedroom linked to lower scores
"A child who has a TV in his or her bedroom is likely to have a score that is eight points lower on a mathematics test compared to a child who doesn't have a TV in the bedroom," she noted. These children also scored lower on the reading and language arts tests.

However, children who have access to a home computer are likely to have higher scores on each of the tests compared with children who don't have access to a home computer, Borzekowski noted.

The reasons why TV has this negative effect are not clear, Borzekowski said. "When there's TV in the bedroom, parents are less likely to have control over the content and the amount watched," Borzekowski said. "They are also unable to know how early or how late the set is on. This seems to be associated with kids' performance on academic tests."

Borzekowski believes that content and the time the TV is on may be the primary reasons for its negative effect. "If the TV is in the family room, then parents can see the content of what children are watching," she said. "Parents can choose to sit alongside and watch, or turn the set off. A simple and straightforward, positive parenting strategy is to keep the TV out of the child's bedroom, or remove it if it's already there."

A lot of TV linked to a reduced likelihood of getting a degree
In the second report, Dr Robert J. Hancox from the University of Otago in Dunedin, New Zealand, and colleagues found, regardless of your intelligence or social background, if you watch a lot of TV during childhood, you are a lot less likely to have a college degree by your mid-20s.

In their study, the researchers followed 1 037 people born in 1972 and 1973. Every two years, between the ages of 5 and 15, they were asked how much television they watched. The researchers found that those who watched the most television during these years had earned fewer degrees by the time they were 26.

"We found that the more television the child had watched, the more likely they were to leave school without any qualifications," Hancox said in a prepared statement. "Those who watched little television had the best chance of going on to university and earning a degree."

Hancox's team found that watching TV at an early age had the most effect on graduating from college. "An interesting finding was that although teenage viewing was strongly linked to leaving school without any qualifications, it was earlier childhood viewing that had the greatest impact on getting a degree," he said. "This suggests that excessive television in younger children has a long-lasting adverse effect on educational performance."

Particularly harmful to very young children
In the third paper, Frederick J. Zimmerman and Dr Dimitri A. Christakis from the University of Washington report that, for very young children, watching TV can result in lower test scores in mathematics, reading recognition and reading comprehension.

"We looked at how much television children watched before age 3 and then at ages 3 to 5," Zimmerman said. "We found that for children who watched a small amount of TV in the earlier years, there was considerable beneficial effect compared to children who watched a lot of TV."

For children aged 3 to 5, the effect was not as clear, Zimmerman said. "There were some beneficial effects of watching TV on reading, but no beneficial effects for math or vocabulary," he noted. "The worst pattern was to watch more than three hours of TV before age 3. Those kids had a significant disadvantage compared to the other kids."

‘No TV for children under two’
Parents should follow the American Academy of Peadiatrics recommendation, which is no TV for children under 2, Zimmerman said. "Personally, I feel the cut-off should be children under 3, because there is just not any good content for children under 3."

One expert believes that TV can have both positive and negative effects, but it all depends on what children are watching.

"Content matters," said Deborah L. Linebarger, an assistant professor at the University of Pennsylvania, who co-authored an accompanying editorial. "Educational content has been found to be related to performance on school readiness tests, higher grades when they are teenagers, whereas, non-educational content tends to be associated with lower academic performance."

Another expert agrees. "TV watching takes up space that could be used by more useful things," said Dr Christopher P. Lucas, a clinical coordinator at the Early Childhood Evaluation and Treatment Program at the New York University Child Study Centre. "TV is not necessarily toxic, but is something that has to be done in moderation; something that balances the other needs of the child for healthy development."

Lucas puts the responsibility for how much TV kids watch and what they watch squarely on parents. "The amount of TV watching certainly has a link with the reduced amount of time reading or doing homework," he said. "The key is the amount of control parents have in limiting the amount of access. Get the TV out of the bedroom; be aware of what is being watched; limit the amount of TV watching.” – (HealthDayNews)
 
Print this article
 Rate this article
Poor 1 2 3 4 5 Excellent

 JOBS
Operations Manager
R20,000-25,000 Per Month Cost To Company Incl Benefits
Gauteng - East Rand
Financial Accountant: CA(SA)
R400,000-500,000 Per Annum Cost To Company
Gauteng - Johannesburg
Key Account Manager
Gauteng
Java Developer-CT
Western Cape - Cape Town
Java Developer-Jozi
Gauteng
Account Manager
R460,000-540,000 Per Annum Cost To Company Plus Benefits
Gauteng
Account Manager
R460,000-540,000 Per Annum Market Related Plus Benefits
South Africa
Case Manager
R210,000-220,000 Per Annum Negotiable
Gauteng - Pretoria
Previous Next
 
Subscribe to...
*Daily tip
*Weekly tip
Want to subscribe to our newsletters?
Click here.
*Stand a chance to win R1000 every month!

 
 Other areas
Homework and the child with ADHD
Beat those back-to-school blues
Should my child skip a grade?
Changing schools tough on kids
The importance of reading to your child
Fitter kids better in class
Add seeing to reading and writing
Tokkel hulle taal
Kids need bathroom breaks
Youngest in class at risk
Should my child skip a grade?
Teaching your teen to drive
Kids and computer strain
Better reading for dyslexic kids
Standing up to bullies
PC-savvy kids perform better
7 ways for children to be smart
Lasting effects of early learning
TV linked to lower marks
Father's devotion to help child
Bullying, a serious business
Back to school without a fuss
Teaching toddlers to talk
 Sponsored links
 Health24 links

Advertisement

 

© Health24 2000-2008. All rights reserved
  
We comply with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health
information.
Verify here.