Infants 'unable to use building blocks" due to i-phone addiction
By Graeme Paton, Daily
Telegraph
Rising numbers of infants
lack the motor skills needed to play with building blocks because of an “addiction”
to tablet computers and smartphones, according to teachers.
Many children aged just
three or four can “swipe a screen” but have little or no dexterity in their
fingers after spending hours glued to iPads, it was claimed.
Members of the Association
of Teachers and Lecturers also warned how some older children were unable to
complete traditional pen and paper exams because their memory had been eroded
by overexposure to screen-based technology.
They called on parents to
crackdown on tablet computer use and even turn off wi-fi at night to address
the problem.
The comments were made
after Ofcom figures showed the proportion of households with tablet computers
more than doubled from 20 to 51 per cent last year.
Experts have warned that
the growth is having a serious effect on children’s social and physical
development.
Last year, a doctor
claimed that rising numbers of young people—including one aged just
four—required therapy for compulsive behaviour after being exposed to the
internet and digital devices from birth.
Addressing the ATL annual
conference in Manchester, Colin Kinney, a teacher from Northern Ireland, said
colleagues “talk of pupils who come into their classrooms after spending most
of the previous night playing computer games and whose attention span is so
limited that they may as well not be there”.
He added: “I have spoken
to a number of nursery teachers who have concerns over the increasing numbers
of young pupils who can swipe a screen but have little or no manipulative
skills to play with building blocks or the like, or the pupils who cannot
socialise with other pupils but whose parents talk proudly of their ability to
use a tablet or smartphone.”
Addressing members, he
said the “brilliant computer skills” shown by many pupils was “outweighed by
their deteriorating skills in pen and paper exams because they rely on instant
support of the computer and are often unable to apply what they should have
learned from their textbooks”.
Mark Montgomery, a teacher
from Northern Ireland, said overexposure to technology had been linked to
weight gain, aggressive behaviour, tiredness and repetitive strain injury.
He called on parents to
turn home wi-fi off overnight to stop children staying awake to play online
games on iPads.
“It is our job to make
sure that the technology is being used wisely and productively and that pupils
are not making backward steps and getting obsessed and exhibiting aggressive
and anti-social behaviours,” he added.
“In the same way we can
use a brick to either break a window or build a house, digital technology can
be used for good or bad, and teachers can and should help their pupils make
positive choices so they have positive experiences.”
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