Sara DeWitt: 3 fears about screen time for kids -- and why they're not true
Inspired by Mister Rogers, Sara DeWitt strives to make every child feel special by charting the forefront of new digital mediums where kids spend their time. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
by thinking about this device,
in your pockets right now.
check their phones
of waking up every morning.
another 50 times during the day.
to be a necessity.
in the hands of a three-year-old,
their children's social growth;
from getting up and moving;
a preschooler interacting with a screen.
up and moving even more.
about what a child is learning
have the power
an unlikely champion for this cause.
with kids and books.
about preschoolers and websites.
a three-year-old named Maria.
a computer before.
was teach her how to use the mouse,
she moved it across the screen,
named X the Owl.
pushed back from the table, leaped up
frantically back at him.
for a three-year-old.
for more than 15 years,
harnessing the power of technology
we're missing a big opportunity.
their potential
is nothing new;
about the newly dominant media:
from one another.
from the outside world.
of "Mister Rogers' Neighborhood,"
to look at television as a tool,
emotional growth.
and he held a conversation,
to each child individually
across the media landscape today,
in the eyes of children.
this feeling of anxiety.
at three common fears
from getting up and moving."
are zoologist brothers
called "Wild Kratts."
a very natural kid play pattern --
on-screen with wings.
and we turned off the screens?
to catch mosquitoes.
and fold their wings in.
up and moving.
differently than I flew
embodied learning
is just a waste of time.
from their education."
about a player's skill
before they found the right answer?
and apply it to academic learning.
80 preschoolers play these games.
of those preschoolers
were actually helping kids
wanted us to dig deeper.
and student assessment.
that back-end game-play data
to predict a child's math scores.
they essentially trained the computer
standardized math scores.
of each child's score,
some Curious George games.
that these games weren't built
believes that games like these
about a child's cognitive learning
testing time in the classroom?
snapshots of insight
their individualized learning?
is often the biggest.
from my child."
of uninterrupted time
you hand a tablet to your three-year-old.
where you probably feel very guilty
you receive a text message.
that's always within arm's reach.
five rhyming words.
that rhymes with 'cat'?
simple tips like these,
at the dinner table with their kids.
that their parents knew
with their parents.
about their media
published a study
Neighborhood" could promote
catch to this study:
when parents talked to kids
actually talk to kids about the content
and what they're watching.
with my four-year-old.
earlier today?"
that I made my car out of a pickle?
about what was fun in the game
to school that morning.
that all digital media is great for kids.
for us to be concerned
of children's content
to be thinking about balance:
against all the other things
to learn and to grow?
in the same world that we live in,
check their phones
how and why to use them.
for the positive impacts
in our children's lives?
can become a reality.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Sara DeWitt - Children’s media expertInspired by Mister Rogers, Sara DeWitt strives to make every child feel special by charting the forefront of new digital mediums where kids spend their time.
Why you should listen
Sara DeWitt's work in the children's digital space was first inspired by Mister Rogers's approach to television. Just as he strove to make every child feel special through that new medium, her vision is to make each interaction with a game, stream and view an opportunity for children, parents, and teachers to learn and delight in new discoveries.
Over the last 18 years, DeWitt has worked at the forefront of new platforms, in an effort to be everywhere kids are: from websites and mobiles apps to streaming video, augmented reality, 3D-rendered experiences, and wearable technologies. She oversees the Kidscreen- and Webby-award winning pbskids.org website, PBS KIDS streaming video services and the PBS KIDS portfolio of educational apps for children. In 2014, she was named one of the top 42 Women Leading in Education by the USC Rossier School of Education and one of the Top Women in Digital by Cynopsis Media in 2016.
Before her career in public media, DeWitt worked as a preschool teacher, a management researcher and studied media habits of children in rural areas of the United States. She is a military spouse who has moved with her husband and two young sons four times in the last five years. They currently live in Alexandria, Virginia.
Sara DeWitt | Speaker | TED.com