Shopping Blog
Advertising
Classifieds
Contact us
Giveaways
Homepage
RSS Feed
Search
Twitter
Web Feeds









Sesame Street Baby Videos Launched

The Washington Post has an interesting article about the controversy over the new Sesame Street DVD. The creators of the popular children's educational show just released a new line of videos which are targeted at very young children: as young as six months. But some child development experts believe that children shouldn't watch TV at all before they are at least two years old. The popularity of the Baby Einstein videos has fueled the debate.
The DVDs -- part of a series called "Sesame Beginnings" -- are intended to be watched by parents along with their small children. Sesame Workshop developed the shows with help of experts from Zero to Three, a well-regarded nonprofit advocacy group. Despite that prestigious partnership, the project has drawn fire from other experts who note that the American Academy of Pediatrics advises against TV viewing for children under 2. They fear the Sesame brand and Zero to Three's endorsement will convince many parents their infants would benefit from watching videos.

"There is no evidence that screen media is beneficial for babies and growing evidence it may be harmful," said the Boston-based Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood. "'Sesame Beginnings' will encourage babies' devotion to TV characters that have been licensed to promote hundreds of other products." There already is a huge market for videos aimed at infants: "Teletubbies" has been on the air for nearly a decade, sometimes drawing similar criticism, and The Walt Disney Co.'s Baby Einstein products are very lucrative. Sesame Workshop had stayed out of this field, but says it now has found an effective way to promote interaction between parents and children under 2 _ something its executives say other shows don't do well.

"We didn't go into this in an impulsive way," said Rosemarie Truglio, Sesame Workshop's vice president of education and research. "We wanted to invite the parent into the viewing situation, to give the adult information about child development." Working toward that goal, the videos show characters such as Baby Elmo and Baby Big Bird with their parents or caregivers, going through daily routines like feeding and bedtime. Truglio contends there is no scientific research justifying the "extreme recommendation" from the pediatrics academy to keep the youngest children away from TV. "The reality is there's TV in 98 percent of all homes, and parents feel comfortable with it," she said. "We have to stop blaming parents, and create responsible content for them. ... The key is moderation. We're not advocating just plopping kids in front of a TV screen."

*****

Zero to Three's executive director, Matthew Melmed, said he had no second thoughts about the partnership and accused Linn's group of misrepresenting the new DVDs. "These are not 'baby videos' -- these are DVDs designed to promote healthy parent-child interactions," he said. "Once people understand what this product is designed to do, the response has been favorable." More than two-thirds of parents with kids under 2 already let them watch an average of two hours of TV a day, Melmed said. "What we're trying to do is meet parents in their daily reality, to help them do a better job in what is really the hardest job any person has," he said.

Dr. Kyle Pruett, a child development expert at Yale University and member of Zero to Three's board, initially was skeptical of the new videos but said his views changed as he thought of how to improve options for parents who already had decided to expose their small children to videos. "These are the absolute antithesis of park-your-baby-in-front-of-the-TV kind of videos," he said. "They are thoughtful, informative -- it's not a corporate campaign trying to draw kids into TV life."
As our society becomes more technologically advanced and media-oriented, we expect this debate to continue for quite some time. Parenting advice has changed drastically over the last twenty-five years and there is no consensus on the horizon between battling experts. That means parents have to rely on their common sense. And the little ones sure do love Big Bird.

Tags: sesame-beginnings | children-dvd

Posted on April 4, 2006
Permalink | Subscribe | | | Comments (View) |





blog comments powered by Disqus

The Writers Write Lifestyle Network
Bloggers Blog
Crafters Craft
Drivers Drive
Fantasy SF Blog
Gamers Game
Health News Blog
HowToWeb.com
The IWJ Blog
Lovers Love
Media Cynic
Petosphere
Pleasant Morning Buzz
Readers Read
Science News Blog
Shopping Blog
Singers Sing
Surfers Surf
Traders Trade
Video Nacho
Watchers Watch
Workers Work
The Write News
Writer's Blog

Sales & Coupons
ShoppersShop.com's Sales & Deals section includes coupons, sales and free shipping offers.



Search ShoppingBlog.com


Add to Google












www.shoppingblog.com

Copyright © 2002-2010 by Writers Write, Inc. All Rights Reserved.