Kids are starting a revolution to get their parents to put down their phones
Like many seven-year-olds, Emil Rustige gets ticked off when his parents
pay attention to their phones instead of him. But unlike other kids,
Emil decided to take the issue to the streets.
With the help of his parents, Rustige organized a demonstration on Sept.
8th in his hometown of Hamburg, Germany, with 150 people joining him to
encourage parents to put down their phones.
The slogan for the demonstration: ”Play with ME, not with your cell phones!”
Ouch.
As parents panic over how to pry seemingly addictive digital devices
away from their children, children are starting a bit of a
counterrevolution—insisting their parents get a grip on their own tech
obsessions. In a recent US survey about teens’ social media habits, for
example, 33% of nearly 1,000 respondents between the ages of 13 and 17
said they wished their parents would get off their devices.
“They are bothered by their friends and parents being on social media,”
says Ron Dahl, director of the Center on the Developing Adolescent at
the University of California, Berkeley. “They see and feel like they are
not being paid attention, and they probably don’t recognize that they
do that, too.”
Indeed, the youth revolution may be a bit lacking in self-awareness. The
same survey found that 16% of teens report using social media “almost
constantly,” and another 22% say they use it several times an hour.
Still, the fact that both young children and teenagers are complaining
about distracted adults sheds light on an often-ignored problem. Parents
are just as subject to the lure of social media and smartphones as
their children—and when they give in, their kids tend to miss them.
What science says about technology and parenting
Jenny Radesky, a pediatrician at the University of Michigan Medical
School, studies the effect of technology on relationships between
parents and children. According to a paper she published in Pediatric
Research with Brandon T. McDaniel of Illinois State University, the more
parents reported instances of “technoference”—technological devices
interfering with social interactions—the more behavioral problems their
kids had. The causation was not clear: either parents turn to tech as a
form of escapism from children’s issues, or parents steeped in tech have
kids who are more likely to misbehave.
In the two-year study, which included 183 parents with a child under
five years old, parents with high technology use were predictive of
small but significant behavior problems in kids, with kids escalating
being more hyperactive, easily frustrated, and having more temper
tantrums. The study also found that parents may become less responsive
to their children because digital distractions give parents less
exposure to reading their children’s emotions. “Parents who frequently
use mobile devices during parent-child activities showed lower
understanding of their child’s mental states and intentions,” it
concluded.
Conversely, bad behavior from kids resulted in adults turning to
technology, potentially for stress relief, suggesting the potential for a
nasty spiral: kids behave badly because they don’t get much attention,
driving their parents to digital distraction, thus resulting in more bad
behavior. The study notes: “Clinically, our results suggest that mobile
devices and other digital technology are potentially serving
stress-relieving purposes for parents, but at the same time potentially
displacing opportunities for parent-child connection important to child
health and development.”
Of course, parents may be more likely to lose themselves in social media
because it’s all so new to them. Meanwhile, young people are already
over Facebook, and seem to be showing some signs of some social media
fatigue overall. The Guardian cited one survey of 9,000 slightly older
internet users (18-24) from the research firmAmpere Analysis found that
attitudes towards social media had changed a lot in two years. In 2016,
66% of young people agreed with the statement “social media is important
to me,” compared to only 57% in 2018. Meanwhile, social-media use
among adults is surging: Among the 45-plus age bracket, the share who
say they value social media has increased from 23% to 28% in the past
year, according to the Ampere survey. (Note that self-reported survey
responses are not always the most reliable.)
There may be an upside to all this parental distraction. Sherry Turkle, a
professor in the Science, Technology and Society program at MIT and the
author of Reclaiming Conversation: The Power of Talk in a Digital Age,
told Quartz that she is more hopeful for the next generation because of
the undesirable example adults are setting for young people. “They know
what it felt like to have parents who had no time for them and turned
instead to their phones,” she said. “That sense of cost and loss, more
than any notion of ‘discipline,’ is what I think is going to get us to
another place.”
The pint-sized protester
Emil Rustige told the German press he got the idea for a demonstration
from an anti-fascism protest he attended in May. He saw that he could
take a stand, and suggested the idea to his parents, who decided to
support him. His father, a 37-year-old pediatrician, registered the
demonstration with the police. While the family didn’t think it would
garner much attention, almost 400 people expressed interest on Facebook,
and many German media outlets reported the story.
Emil’s father, Martin Rustige, told Spiegel Online (link in German):
“What Emil is reproaching me for is those moments when he’s with me and
is perhaps communicating with me and I’m completely absent and doing
something else.”
“I don’t like it that my dad is always playing around with his phone,”
six-year-old Ylvi Schmitt, who was at the protest, told Frankfurter
Allgemeiner Zeitung (link in German). Her father admitted that he needed
to “take a good look at himself.”
As with many other countries, tech addiction is a hot topic in Germany.
Media outlets and commentators have honed in on the damage parents can
inflict on their kids by being glued to their smartphones—from accidents
that happen when parents aren’t paying attention to negatively
influencing children’s development. ”If parents do not respond to their
children’s eye contact, there are research studies that show that
children react with physical and hormonal stress,” psychologist Catarina
Katzer told public broadcaster (link in German) Mitteldeutsche
Rundfunk.
In January 2017, the Youth and Family Office in the town of Augsburg,
Bavaria, ran a “Talk to your child!” poster campaign urging parents to
put their phones away and give their children eye contact and ample
attention.
While it is easy to imagine that Emil’s protest is a publicity stunt
straight from his social-media-savvy parents, his father was quick to
point out the whole thing doesn’t exactly make them look good. “I’m the
one who will be at the back of the demonstration—with my head bowed,
because I’m the one he complains about,” he told Der Spiegel.
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