T.V. Watching May Result in Lower Academic Achievement
Several recently published scientific studies point to
a negative relationship between the amount of time
spent by children and adolescents watching T.V. and
their academic achievement by adulthood.
One study, conducted in New Zealand, followed one thousand
people over several years and found lower academic achievement
among those adults who watched a lot of television as
children.
A second study, conducted in California, found that
children with T.V.’s in their bedrooms scored eight
points lower on academic tests than children who did
not have T.V.s in their bedrooms. Dr. Borzekowski of
Johns Hopkins says “While this study does not prove
that bedroom T.V. sets caused lower scores, it adds to
accumulating data that kids should not have T.V.’s
in their bedrooms.
A third study, conducted by Frederick Zimmerman of University
of Washington, found that those children who watched
more than three hours of T.V. daily before age three
scored worse on academic tests than those children who
watched less T.V.
The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that children
under two years of age not watch T.V. and that children
over two years of age watch no more than two hours of
T.V. per day. They also recommend that there be no T.V.’s
in children’s bedrooms.
John Wilson, vice president of Public Broadcasting Service,
says that other studies have shown that PBS’s children’s
programs can benefit child development.
There is agreement among scientists that further research
is needed. One criticism is that there was no distinction
allowed for the type of content in the T.V. shows that
children watched.
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