Children
are starting school unable to sit up or hold a pencil – and I know the culprit
As an early years
specialist, I’ve seen the drastic impact of screens replacing physical activity
and face-to-face interaction
Tue 18 Feb 2025 14.02 GMT
As an early year’s education specialist, over
the past decade I have seen children enter classrooms with fewer and fewer of
the skills needed to begin their formal education. The key culprit, in my
opinion? Screen time.
On
a child’s first day at school, it’s normal to expect a few nerves. But they
should be able to move around confidently, pick up stationery, make new
friends, build a relationship with their teacher and start to feel part of a
wider community. Instead, a recent survey reported that some children in England and Wales
are unable to sit up or hold a pencil. I have seen kids racked with separation
anxiety and unable to form bonds. Upset and confused, they miss instructions
and hold back or lash out. To a busy teacher this looks like a lack of ability,
or a disruptive child to be managed. Children are
simply being set up to fail.
For
a while, it seemed as if the pandemic might have been the culprit for delayed
development. Lockdowns undeniably had an impact on the development of children raised
during that period as they were unable to play
outside and interact with others, but five years on, it would seem that this
was a short-term issue masking a much longer-term trend.
Lockdowns
compounded habits that had already begun with the introduction of the first
touch-screen phones. More and more parents relied on smartphones to work,
organise their lives, shop, and keep in touch with friends and family.
Burnt-out and distracted, they spent less time actively parenting. In turn,
they handed their kids a device to keep them entertained. The result has been
children growing up with less physical activity and face-to-face social
interaction.
Imagine
spending a year immobilised in a cast – your muscles would weaken and your
movements would become awkward. Now, think about children missing foundational
years of muscle development, when practice should be natural and constant,
because, instead of moving, children have been incentivised to sit quietly with
a device.
Children
need opportunities to run, play, climb and explore. They need obstacles to move
their bodies around, tunnels to crawl through, beams to balance over, and hula
hoops to jump between. Every muscle and joint should be used as they develop
balance and posture. This helps to forge the deep brain-body connections
required for coordination and spatial awareness.
Cognitively,
children are struggling because they are not having quality interactive time
with their caregivers. A cohort study of Australian children aged 12 to 36 months
found a negative association between screen time and parent-child talk. With
fewer adult words spoken, there was a reduction in child vocalisations and the
back-and-forth conversations crucial for language development and social
skills. Devices are also having a behavioural impact, with studies showing a link between excessive screen time and
emotional reactivity, aggression and externalising behaviours in children.
Even more worryingly, these
outcomes are not being distributed equally among children; they affect those
who already face significant disadvantages due to economic and racial
inequality. Research revealed that Dutch children from lower
socioeconomic backgrounds tend to have higher screen time and a study from the US examining sociodemographic factors
found that Black children reported higher levels of various screen time
activities compared with their peers. Interestingly, the researchers behind the
US study made an association between limited access to safe recreational spaces
and increased screen time. Our environments shape us, and it is clear that
children need access to safe play spaces where they can experience socially
interactive and physical play.
Some
children are simply more vulnerable when starting school than others. Rather
than a one-size-fits-all approach, children and families, especially those with
other disadvantages, would benefit from targeted parenting programmes and
support. The main lesson I would give to parents is this: when screen time is
used it should be interactive, with engaging discussions about the content to
enhance learning and connect on-screen lessons to real-life situations,
promoting a child’s cognitive and social development. We cannot turn back the
tide of technology, but we can use it more mindfully.
- Kathryn Peckham is an early childhood consultant, researcher,
author and founder of Nurturing Childhoods
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