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Childhood Unplugged: Practical Advice to Get Kids Off Screens and Find Balance [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 176 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x152x12 mm, kaal: 295 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 11-Jul-2023
  • Kirjastus: New Society Publishers
  • ISBN-10: 0865719829
  • ISBN-13: 9780865719828
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 176 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x152x12 mm, kaal: 295 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 11-Jul-2023
  • Kirjastus: New Society Publishers
  • ISBN-10: 0865719829
  • ISBN-13: 9780865719828

Screens are everywhere. Kids spend an average of 7.5 hours on digital devices every day, not counting school. Childhood Unplugged offers a wealth of constructive ideas for creating healthy boundaries for technology within the home, which can in turn improve children's resilience, independence, and family relationships.



Ditch the devices and bring back the magic of being a kid

Screens are everywhere. Children spend an average of 7.5 hours on digital devices every day with profoundly negative consequences. While some tech may “amplify” real life experience (online music lessons or Zoom calls with faraway family, for example), the vast majority “amputates” by limiting physical activity, creating anxiety, or damaging self-esteem. Childhood Unplugged takes a bold approach to creating healthy boundaries around the use of digital media, suggesting kids should be offline for the majority of their time.

Drawing on her own family’s experience, plus interviews with digital minimalists, educators, and child development experts, author Katherine Martinko presents:

  • Meticulously researched analysis of the impacts of excessive screen time on children's physical, neurological, emotional, and social development
  • Specific pathways to reduced screen exposure, naturally leading to more time spent outdoors, increased confidence and empathy, more creative and active play, and other benefits
  • Inspiration for caregivers overwhelmed by the thought of severing ties with the digital babysitter
  • Age-appropriate advice for fundamental change, with specific sections for babies and toddlers, school-aged children, and adolescents.

Taking a calming, nonjudgmental approach, Childhood Unplugged is a lifeline for parents, caregivers, educators, and anyone who questions the role of digital media and yearns for the young people in their life to experience the profound beauty and magic of childhood.

Arvustused

"...solid ideas for reducing digital dependency."

Publishers Weekly



"Will likely prove to be a popular title for the many parents who want to wean their family's device-dependence."

Library Journal



"...solid ideas for reducing digital dependency."

Publishers Weekly

"With advice on removing televisions from bedrooms and limiting screen time or tablet usage to a couple of hours per week, this is a helpful guide for parents who hope to curb their family's electronic habits."

Foreword Reviews



"A digital minimalists must-have guide to launching your kids into a life of real connectedness and authenticity."

Joshua Becker, #1 Wall Street Journal bestselling author, Things That Matter





"Martinko expertly and urgently takes us deeper into the hidden horrors of too much screen time on the growing child. Then she throws us all a life preserver with the most practical, gentle advice Ive seen."

Angela Hanscom, author, Balanced and Barefoot: How Unrestricted Outdoor Play Makes for Strong, Confident, and Capable Children



"Katherine Martinko makes the case that not only is a screen-free childhood possible, but reducing our children's time on screen is essential for their happiness, sanity, and health. Thoroughly researched and beautifully written, it should be mandatory reading for all parents."

Catherine Price, founder, ScreenLifeBalance.com, author, How to Break Up with Your Phone



"The passionate, clear-eyed, and thoroughly practical guide every parent needs to fight the good fight against the excesses of digital today."

David Sax, bestselling author, The Revenge of Analog and The Future is Analog



"Truthful and transparent expert information combined with pragmatic and practical advice on how to liberate parents and unplug children. A must-read for any parent who wants to bring back the joys of parentingand the fun of childhood."

Dr. Mari Swingle (R. Psych), author, i-Minds, director, Swingle Clinic



"It takes an enormous effort to show our kids the world beyond their screens, but Katherine Martinko teaches us how to get it done in this practical, empathetic, and fascinating new guide."

Michael Harris, author, Solitude and The End of Absence



"Martinko provides an in-depth, well-researched guide filled with reflections on her own journey with (but of course mostly without!) screens, and the joy she has experienced from unplugging. A useful guide for those keen to begin their own screen-free journey."

Outdoor Play Canada



"Martinko has written a must-read for parents struggling with screen time (all of us!). Her well-researched book shows the urgent need to free kids from screens and release them into the outdoors. She offers frazzled parents achievable practical advice rooted in the challenges of parenting today."

Dr. Mariana Brussoni, professor, University of British Columbia, director, Human Early Learning Partnership

Muu info

Short-listed for Foreword INDIES 2023 (United States).Ditch the devices and bring back the magic of being a kid

Acknowledgments
Foreword by Lenore Skenazy
Introduction: The Beautiful Chaos

Part I: The Personal and Social Costs of Screens
Chapter 1: The Kids Are Not All Right
Chapter 2: Amplify, Don't Amputate

Part II: How to Take Control of Screens
Chapter 3: Begin as You Mean to Go On (Babies & Toddlers)
Chapter 4: Freedom to Play (Elementary-Aged Kids)
Chapter 5: Grant Freedom, Demand Responsibility (Adolescents)
Chapter 6: But Everyone's Doing It
Chapter 7: The Parent's Role
Chapter 8: School of Screens

Further Reading
Endnotes
Index
About the Author
About New Society Publishers

Katherine Martinko is an editor and writer with a decade of experience in digital news publishing. She was a senior editor at Treehugger, an internationally respected environmental lifestyle site. Katherine previously wrote for Discovery Network's Parentables website and maintained a popular parenting blog. Many of the thousands of articles she has written over the years explore the importance of raising "offline" kids, teaching them to become resilient and independent, and being wary of the profound effects of too much screen time on developing brains. Katherine is an honors graduate of the University of Toronto, where she studied English and history. She speaks four languages, is a classically trained violinist, an award-winning public speaker, and a community leader who spearheaded a major refugee resettlement effort in her own small town. Katherine lives with her husband and three children in Port Elgin, Ontario. Find her at https://feistyredhair.com.