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How Excessive & Violent Media Harms Children and What We Can Do to Protect Them

How Excessive & Violent Media Harms Children and What We Can Do to Protect Them Kristine Paulsen kristinespaulsen@gmail.com 906 280 4115 www.TakeTheChallengeNow.net. Problems and Solutions. Impact of Excessive & Violent Screen Time on: Aggression and Bullying Social and Emotional Health

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How Excessive & Violent Media Harms Children and What We Can Do to Protect Them

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  1. How Excessive & Violent Media Harms Children and What We Can Do to Protect Them Kristine Paulsenkristinespaulsen@gmail.com 906 280 4115 www.TakeTheChallengeNow.net

  2. Problems and Solutions Impact of Excessive & Violent Screen Time on: • Aggression and Bullying • Social and Emotional Health • Physical Health

  3. Problems & SolutionsDramatic change is possible. Social Change is similar to an epidemic • An empowering vision by a small number of committed people can create epidemics of ideas that will change the world. The Tipping Point by Malcolm Gladwell

  4. Kaiser Foundation 2010 Survey of Entertainment Media Use - Ages 8 to 18 ___ hours of TV a day + ___ hours of computers, video games & movies = ___ TOTAL hours of screen time ___ time spent reading books.

  5. 38% of 8- to 10-year-old boys said they had played Grand Theft Auto • 74% of 11- to 14-year-old boys said they had played Grand Theft Auto (Kaiser Survey, 2010)

  6. Impact of Violent Media on Aggression

  7. The American Medical Association • The American Psychological Association • The American Academy of Pediatrics These three have looked at 50 years of research and agree that media violence is an important factor in the aggression we are seeing in our children today. Viewing entertainment violence can lead to increases in aggressive attitude and behavior. The effects are measurable and long lasting.

  8. Repeated exposure to media violence is a stronger influence on aggressive behavior: • living in poverty • substance abuse • having abusive parents

  9. School Shooter: North American Tour

  10. http://feministfrequency.com/2014/06/16/women-as-background-decoration-tropes-vs-women/http://feministfrequency.com/2014/06/16/women-as-background-decoration-tropes-vs-women/

  11. After Sandy Hook, the Entertainment Software Association released a statement:

  12. The American Psychological Association (APA) Statement on Violent Video Games, 2015 The link between violent video game exposure and aggressive behavior is one of the most studied and best established.

  13. The APA found that: • Research has demonstrated an association between violent video game use and increases in aggressive behavior, aggressive affect, aggressive cognitions and. . . • decreases in prosocial behavior, empathy, and moral engagement;

  14. Supreme Court Video Game Ruling Brown v. Entertainment Merchants Association, June 27, 2011

  15. “What sense does it make to forbid selling to a 13-year-old boy a magazine with an image of a nude woman, while protecting a sale to that 13-year- old of an interactive video game in which he actively, but virtually, binds and gags the woman, then tortures and kills her?” —U.S. Supreme Court Justice Steven Breyer Dissenting Opinion, Brown v. Entertainment Merchants Association, June 27, 2011

  16. The average American child sees 200,000 violent acts on TV by age 18. Powerpuff Girls - Watch our kindergarten crime fighters kick major villain butt!

  17. Effects of “The Might Morphin Power Rangers” on Children’s Aggression with Peers

  18. Indicators of School Crime and Safety • In 2014, there were 486,400 nonfatal violent victimizations at school among students 12 to 18 years of age.

  19. Jaheem Herrera Carl Joseph Walker-Hoover Eric Mohat Constantly bullied, he ends his life at age 11 Teen Commits Suicide Due to Bullying: Parents Sue School for Son's Death My bullied son's last day on Earth Slide prepared by Jim Vetter

  20. The Josephson Institute of Ethics surveyed 43,321 teenagers (2010) • 47% said they had been “bullied, teased, or taunted in a way that seriously upset them.” • 50% said they had “bullied, teased, or taunted someone at least once.”

  21. Impact of Media on Mental Health • Children who spent > 2 hours day watching TV or other screens were at increased risk of high levels of psychological difficulties • Teens who spend long hours watching TV/screens are at higher risk for depression as adults

  22. 1 out of 10 video gamers develop a pathological addiction • Defined as damage to actual functioning -- their school, social, family, occupational, psychological functioning, etc. • To be considered pathological, gamers must be damaging multiple areas of their lives. Pediatrics, 2011

  23. A study in the journal Pediatrics notes “Youth who became pathological gamers ended up with increased levels of depression, anxiety, and social phobia.”

  24. The most addictive video games are Massively Multiplayer Online Role-Playing Games World of Warcraft has 10 million subscribers who pay $15 a month (1.8 Billion a year)

  25. A study published in the journal Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior reported: “Teens who reported 5 hours or more of video games/Internet daily use, in the 2009 Youth Risk Behavior Survey (YRBS), had a significantly higher risk for sadness, suicidal ideation, and suicide planning.

  26. Indiana Medical School MRI Study Aggressive Behavior Disorder

  27. Aggressive Behavior Disorder

  28. “Why wasn’t the public aware of the research?” The CNN reporter asked Dr. Anderson, Iowa State professor and director of the Research Center on Violence, after the Sandy Hook massacre. Dr. Anderson responded, “It is the strategy of the television, movies, and video game industries to keep the general public confused about media research. But there is no confusion about the research. The research is clear; media violence is a causal risk factor for violence.”

  29. Consolidation of Media • In the 1980’s the number of broadcast stations were greatly reduced allowing media to be controlled by fewer and more powerful companies. • The Telecommunications Act of 1996 for the first time allowed multi media conglomerants. • This consolidation of media ownership has led to six huge media conglomerates.

  30. Time Warner is the Largest conglomerate in the world, with holdings including: CNN, a joint venture with CBS, HBO, Cinemax, Cartoon Network, TBS, TNT, America Online, MapQuest, Moviefone, Warner Bros. Pictures, and more than 150 magazines including Time, Sports Illustrated, Fortune, Marie Claire and People and in 2009 had revenues of 29 Billion.

  31. What would we do if we knew?

  32. Impact of Excessive Media on Learning Such early cellphone use is all the more dangerous because digital technology does not just consume attention; it also shapes the brain. Your Brain on Screens, Dr. Richard Cytowic

  33. “One speaks with a baby, not at it. Physical engagement allows the youngster to take in subtle signals such as tone, gesture, the way the other makes eye contact.”

  34. Would parents take devices away if they knew they were shaping the neural pathways of their child’s developing brain in harmful and irreversible ways? Your Brain on Screens, R. Cytowic

  35. Associations Between Early Childhood TV Exposure and Academic, Psychosocial, & Physical Well-being We found every additional hour of TV exposure among toddlers corresponded to: • a future decrease in classroom engagement and success at math • more sedentary lifestyle • higher consumption of junk food and higher body mass index • increased victimization by classmates L. S. Pagani,et.al., Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, 2010

  36. Exposure to TV Violence Relate to Irregular Attention and Brain Structure, 2014 • “We found that the more violent TV viewing a participant reported, the worse they performed on tasks of attention and cognitive control. . . • Violent TV impacted these subjects’ broad ability to make plans and decisions, reason and problem-solve, regulate attention, and inhibit behavior in order to achieve goals. They were more impulsive as well.

  37. Excessive Media & Physical Health The University of Buffalo, New York, conducted a study called Couch Potato Kids. • 3 weeks collected data on exercise, eating, TV • 3 weeks increased TV from baseline by 50% • 3 weeks decreased TV from baseline by 50%

  38. Research Summaries • On the road to obesity: TV viewing increases intake of high-density foods. • Watching TV for an average of six hours a day could shorten the viewer's life expectancy by almost five years, indicates research published online in the British Journal of Sports Medicine. • Television Viewing and Risk of Type 2 Diabetes, Cardiovascular Disease, and All-Cause Mortality: A Meta-Analysis

  39. The Solution: Strategies for Change

  40. Student Media Awareness to Reduce Television (S.M.A.R.T.) The Stanford University Prevention Research Center developed the S.M.A.R.T. curriculum for 3rd grade students to reduce the negative effects of excessive TV, video and video game use.

  41. In randomized controlled trials the S.M.A.R.T. curriculum was proven to: • Reduce children’s TV, videos & video game use • Reduce obesity and weight gain • Reduce aggression in class and on playground • Reduce children’s requests for toys advertised on TV

  42. Teachers and consultants in Northern Michigan developed Take the Challenge, a preschool – High School program, inspired by the SMART curriculum & other media education resources. The program also includes reading, writing, math and technology activities. Lessons are aligned to the new Common Core Standards.

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