A Qualitative Study on Children's Digital Media Use and Parents' Self-interest

Publication date

2022-07

Authors

Geurts, Suzanne MISNI 0000000492528311
Koning, Ina MISNI 0000000388218890
Vossen, HelenISNI 0000000397152096
van den Eijnden, ReginaISNI 0000000393899010

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

This qualitative study provides insight into the role of parents' self-interest in digital media use of children in different age groups. We conducted 31 semi-structured interviews with fathers/mothers of children aged 3-16 years who were recruited via targeted sampling. A deductive and inductive content analysis was applied. Results show that parents' self-interest in letting children use digital media includes being able to do other tasks without being bothered, having some me-time, managing children's behavior, avoiding discussions, having moments to use digital media themselves and spending quality-time together. In addition, we found that the manner in which parents let children use digital media out of self-interest seems to depend on age. With younger children, parents initiate digital media use or set times at which children are allowed to use digital media. With older children, parents use a passive manner by omitting restrictive responses to their children's media use. Current findings can be used to inform interventions aimed at reducing children's screen time.

Keywords

Children’s digital media use, Parents’ self-interest, Qualitative research, Developmental and Educational Psychology, Life-span and Life-course Studies

Citation

Geurts, S M, Koning, I M, Vossen, H & Van den Eijnden, R J J M 2022, 'A Qualitative Study on Children's Digital Media Use and Parents' Self-interest', Journal of Child and Family Studies, vol. 31, no. 7, pp. 2015-2026. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10826-021-02074-3