New study explores children and tech
The Sector > Research > New study offers insights into the lives of children growing up in high tech homes 

New study offers insights into the lives of children growing up in high tech homes 

by Freya Lucas

November 20, 2024

A major study, the first of its kind, has revealed key insights into the extent to which children under three years of age have access to digital technology in the home, how they use it and how it supports their language development.

 

It reveals that children are born into hugely technologized homes – 98 per cent of the families who took part in the study’s online survey had access to a smartphone and the same proportion have Wi-Fi connectivity.

 

Almost all families in the study (92 per cent) reported they have a television/smart television and over 80 per cent have laptops and/or tablets.

 

The research also captured the wide range of tech in the home that children interact with, including smart devices (such as smartphones, smart speakers), interactive toys, audio players and even domestic appliances (smart refrigerators and touch sensitivity control panels).

 

Toddlers, Tech and Talk, led by Manchester Metropolitan University, is the first in-depth study about tech in the home lives of children from birth to 36 months of age. It was carried out with Lancaster University, Swansea University, Queen’s University Belfast and the University of Strathclyde.

 

“Official statistics and discussions in society often assume that very young children don’t use digital media,” Professor Rosie Flewitt said. 

 

“Our research shows that this is not the case. Our findings offer much needed insights into very young children’s interactions with a range of digital technology at home.”

 

Other key findings include:

 

  • The vast majority of parents agree that tech offers children opportunities to develop skills with numbers (83 per cent), reading (75 per cent) and creative skills (75 per cent), and most disagree that they harm learning.
  • Many parents believe digital devices can be damaging to young children’s physical health (47 per cent) and mental health (49 per cent).
  • The majority of parents (81 per cent) believe digital technology offers opportunities for young children to have fun.
  • Most parents feel confident in supporting their child to use devices (66 per cent) and feel able to keep them safe online (72 per cent).

 

The study included an online survey of more than 1,400 parents across the UK, interviews with parents and early years professionals, as well as 40 intensive case studies in family homes.

 

“Parents are highly aware of opportunities and tensions around their children’s use of digital technology. They balance beneficial opportunities for their children to communicate with others, play and learn, with concerns over possible damaging effects of overuse,” Professor Flewitt added.

 

The study highlights the many different ways that parents use technology with their children, such as looking at photographs and videos, taking photographs, watching programmes, playing music, making digital paintings and listening to stories.

 

Many very young children also watch videos and take photos by themselves, with some also playing digital games on their own, including number and phonics learning apps.

 

The study offers further insights into how technology can offer rich opportunities for very young children’s language development, such as listening and singing along to songs and nursery rhymes, watching and talking about much-loved TV characters with their parents or siblings and talking with family in video calls.

 

“Many families think of creative ways of supporting their children’s language development,” Professor Julia Gillen from Lancaster University said.

 

“For example – we found some parents using smart speakers to practice animal sounds with their babies while changing nappies or encouraging toddlers to sing nursery rhymes.”

 

One common misconception in this space is that digital technology causes children to sit passively, but researchers found that they often respond to videos by dancing or engaging in rhythmic movements.

 

“Many young children are learning elements of sign language from a very popular YouTube channel and this can be very useful to them when they start going to nursery school,” Professor Gillen added.

 

Parents who took part in the study agreed that the digital experiences of the youngest children in society have been relatively overlooked, and that adults need richer information on good practice.

 

The two-year study was funded by the UKRI Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) and may be accessed here.

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