The debate around children and screen time has become one of the most contentious areas of modern parenting. Advice ranges from ‘eliminate screens entirely’ to ‘stop worrying, it depends entirely on content’. The research, as is often the case, is more nuanced than either extreme suggests.
What the Research Actually Says
The evidence on screen time and children’s development is genuinely mixed and often misrepresented. There is reasonably consistent evidence that excessive passive screen consumption — scrolling, watching without interaction, mindless gaming — is associated with lower wellbeing, disrupted sleep, and reduced physical activity in children. There is much weaker evidence for harm from interactive, creative, or social uses of technology, particularly when these are well monitored.
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Context also matters enormously. Screen time that replaces sleep, physical activity, face-to-face social interaction, or reading carries different risks from screen time that is managed alongside a full and active offline life.
The Case for Play
Unstructured, child-directed play is one of the most developmentally rich activities available to children, and it is in genuine competition with screen time for children’s attention. The cognitive, social, emotional, and physical benefits of play — creativity, problem-solving, social negotiation, physical development, emotional regulation — are well documented and represent exactly the qualities that will serve children throughout their lives.
The worry is not primarily that screens are harmful in themselves, but that time spent passively consuming content is time not spent in these more actively developmental pursuits. The opportunity cost is often more significant than any direct harm.
A Balanced Approach
Rather than focusing primarily on time limits — which tend to create conflict and make screens more desirable — many child development experts now advocate for a qualitative approach. What kind of content is your child engaging with? Are there regular periods of genuinely screen-free time each day? Is technology used with you, or primarily alone? Is it enriching or purely escapist?
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Surbiton High School encourages its pupils to engage critically and thoughtfully with digital technology as part of a balanced, flourishing life. Find out more about the school at https://www.surbitonhigh.com/
