Jul 23, 2021
Join Audrey's email subscriber community for resources and ideas for happier, more connected families.
Jean Rogers is the Director of the Children’s Screen Time Action Network, where she leads a coalition of practitioners, educators, advocates, and parents who collaborate on practical methods to reduce children’s time on screens and digital devices, mitigate the dangers, and preserve childhood in the digital age. Jean is the host of Action Network Live!, a webcast bringing experts to parents on how screens impact all aspects of child development. She writes a weekly blog and speaks widely to parents, teachers and activists, empowering them to implement simple solutions to a complex 21st century parenting challenge.
Jean earned Masters’ degrees in Education and Parenting Education at Wheelock College, where she took up the mantel of Susan Linn and Diane Levin, trailblazers in media literacy, play-based learning, and avoiding a commercialized childhood. Prior to working at the Action Network, Jean was a freelance marketing writer, illuminating products and services for nonprofit and business clients. She was also a music teacher, director of a large church school, and a college writing center consultant. Her greatest role is mother to 5 children.
• The Social Dilemma is fantastic because it helps you understand that social media apps were designed for profit for the companies that designed, not for the benefit of the users (a good term because of the addictive nature of the apps).
• If you have preteens or teens, we encourage you to have them watch The Social Dilemma with you. They'll understand more at the end, they'll maybe see themselves or their friends in it or their cousins. They'll understand it from the perspective of one of those ages. If you have young children, the film is really a cautionary tale. It's something that if you watch it now you can prevent some of these things from happening.
• While we do have the children's online privacy and protection act, that has not translated into the regulations for social media that you would expect, and kids are still able to scroll. They're able to find things.
• For our kids, it's so easy for them to believe everything that they see and for us to need to explain that not everything is real on the internet. Fake news and stories spread much faster than true ones.
• Where to connect with and find out more about Jean and the
Children's Screen Time Action Network:
Website
Facebook
Book:
Kids Under Fire
Action Network Live
• Jean's interview with Audrey and Lenore Skenazy on Action Network Live.
Happy Campers at Home: Navigating Summer with Children during COVID-19 from CCFC on Vimeo.
• "The Great Hack"
• Audrey: "I had heard that a long time ago about Steve jobs, that his kids weren't allowed to have iPads."
• Audrey: "These tools that have been created are starting to erode the social fabric of how society works."
• Jean: "The Children’s screen Time Action Network is a project of Campaign for Commercial-Free Childhood."
• Jean: "Creating routines reduces stress."
• Jean: "I think one of the things they say in the film is, it's not like a bolt of lightning that happens. All of a sudden your kids are converted to this world. It's a gradual change in their behavior. And so we don't want to wake up someday and not know our kids."
• Jean: "There are studies that say, we learn a lot more. We absorb a lot more by reading the real book."
• Jean: "You can't change it. That only the industry can change it, but you can change what's going on in your own home."
Ep. 156: The Tech Solution with Dr. Shimi Kang
Ep. 148: Connecting with Nature & Each Other During COVID with Ariella Rogge
Ep. 144: Raising Happy, Durable Kids in the Digital Age
Ep. 116: Why We Need to Unplug and Connect with our Families
This week's One Simple Thing is one from Happy Campers: 9 Summer Camp Secrets for Raising Kids Who Become Thriving Adults.
Digital Minimalism, Cal
Newport
I think we’re only scratching the surface on the damage
caused by our current technology habits. As I argued
in Digital
Minimalism, these tools are both powerful and indifferent to
your best interests. Until you decide to adopt a minimalist ethos,
and deploy technology intentionally to serve specific values you
care about, the damage it inflicts will continue to accumulate.
-Cal Newport,
Do Smartphones Make Us Dumber?
If you enjoyed this episode and know of others who would be encouraged by the ideas, please share!
Leave a review for the Sunshine Parenting Podcast on iTunes! Reviews are very important for helping podcasts find their audiences, and I would love your support in helping people find Sunshine Parenting!
Would you like to have access to bonus posts, resources and podcast episodes? Join me as a supporter on Patreon!
Audrey