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Kaiser Family Foundation
Study Shows "Media Multi-tasking" Impacts
Media Use Among Children and Teens
A new study from the Kaiser Family Foundation finds
youth are spending more time using computers, the
Internet, and video games without reducing the time
they spend with television, print, and music. Young
people are able to fill increasing amounts of media
content into the same amount of time each day because
of "media multi-tasking," e.g. going online
while watching television, according to the study.
The study, Generation M: Media in the Lives of
8-18 Year-olds, looked at media use among a national
sample of more than 2,000 third through twelfth graders,
including almost 700 self-selected participants who
kept seven-day media diaries.
One area of concern raised by the study is that children's
bedrooms are increasingly becoming "multi-media
centers." Two-thirds of all 8-18 year olds have
a television in their bedroom, and 49 percent have
a video game player there. Fifty-four percent have
a VCR or DVD player; 37 percent have cable or satellite
television; 31 percent have a computer; and 20 percent
have Internet access in their bedroom. The study shows
that youth with a television in their bedroom spend
almost 1 ½ hours more in a typical day watching
television than those without a set in their room.
The study also finds that a majority of all 8-18
year olds say their parents have no rules about television
watching. Forty-six percent indicated they do have
rules, but only 20 percent say their parents enforce
the rules "most" of the time.
You can find additional information about Generation
M: Media in the Lives of 8-18 Year-olds at http://www.kff.org/entmedia/entmedia030905pkg.cfm.
To learn more about the effects of media on children,
visit the National Institute on Media and the Family
at www.mediafamily.org
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