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Raising Parents with Emily Oster

Ep 6: Are Smartphones Stealing Childhood?

Raising Parents with Emily Oster

The Free Press

Parenting, Kids & Family

4.5 • 660 Ratings

🗓️ 23 October 2024

⏱️ 52 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In today’s world, many parents feel like we need our kids to have phones. We tell ourselves it’s for their safety—they may need it while walking to a friend’s house or when going on a school field trip. And then there’s the fact that for many parents, the idea of not giving your kid a phone—when everyone else has one—just doesn’t even seem like a possibility. By age 10, 42 percent of kids in the U.S. have a phone. By age 12, it’s 71 percent, and by age 14, it’s 91 percent. The pressure to conform is just too great. And the reality is that phones keep kids entertained, which gives parents a break—to cook dinner, to do the laundry, or. . . to scroll through Instagram on their own phones.  The problem is that most parents have no idea what the effect of all of this phone time—46 percent of teens say they use their phones “almost constantly”—is. What are phones doing to our kids, their development, their physical health, their mental health, their social lives? Is the panic around cell phones like the panic that once met the invention of the radio or TV? Is it a kind of hysteria? Or are phones fundamentally transforming the essence of what it means to be a kid? Are phones. . . stealing childhood? If so, what should we do about it? Should we leave phone regulations in the hands of schools, or should parents take the initiative to drive the change? Is there even a middle ground, or have we passed the point of no return? Resources from this episode: Jonathan Haidt The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness (Bookshop) Ben Halpert Savvy Cyber Kids (Amazon) Johann Hari Stolen Focus: Why You Can’t Pay Attention—and How to Think Deeply Again (Bookshop) Delay Smartphones

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hi, everyone. Emily here, and you're listening to Raising Parents, my new podcast in partnership with

0:06.0

the free press, where we interrogate all of the big and pressing and confusing questions facing

0:11.6

parents today. Before we get to the show, I'm so excited to tell you that this season is in partnership

0:17.3

with Airbnb. If you know anything about me, you know how much I love Airbnb.

0:22.4

I think I'm currently holding like six Airbnb reservations in my account.

0:27.4

Airbnb has provided incredible experiences for me, my family, and our friends across the

0:33.0

country and the world time and time again.

0:36.3

More on that and how you too can use Airbnb

0:39.2

on your next family trip later in the episode.

0:42.0

For now, on to the show.

0:46.3

Go where you want to go, call when you want to call.

0:50.3

Get the lowest price ever at Radio Shack

0:52.5

on the most powerful, transportable cellular phone system. Just $7.99 when you sign up at Radio Shack on the most powerful transportable cellular phone system.

0:55.3

Just $7.99 when you sign up with Radio Shacks authorized cellular phone carrier.

0:59.8

Go where you want to go.

1:01.8

At the risk of seriously dating myself, I was a college student when I got my very first cell phone.

1:10.1

Radio Shack's complete transportable cellular phone system, just $7.99 only at Radio Shack, the technology store.

1:20.3

I owned what was colloquially known as a brick phone, a cumbersome, hefty device.

1:25.9

Initially, I didn't think it was particularly useful. I only used it to call my

1:29.6

boyfriend, and it wasn't so different from a regular phone. But then came 3G technology and the age

1:36.3

of the mobile internet, and I was proven wrong. Every once in a while, a revolutionary product

1:43.5

comes along. That changes everything.

...

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