Children's literacy levels fall as social media hits reading

Authored by telegraph.co.uk and submitted by ManiaforBeatles
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Heavy use of social media by children has been linked to lower levels of literacy for the first time.

The landmark study by University College London (UCL), based on 11,000 children tracked from their births in 2000, found their time on social media could be detracting from reading and homework, with a potential knock-on effect on their literacy.

Professor Yvonne Kelly, director of UCL's International Centre for Lifecourse Studies, said the findings suggested a link between “the amount of time young people spend on social media and their levels of literacy”.

Both boys and girls who were heavier users were affected the same. “We looked at whether the more time young people spend on social media, the less time they have for the things that might improve their literacy such as reading for enjoyment and doing homework,” said Professor Kelly.

She said it was now time for the government to consider setting official “healthy” time limits on children’s social media use outside school. Her research also showed heavy users of social media – and particularly girls – were more likely to be depressed.

SiliconLovechild on August 20th, 2018 at 14:06 UTC »

"The landmark study by University College London"

Which study? This article is poorly cited but makes a ton of claims. Basic science literacy says this article doesn't pass the smell test.

Edit: Looks like it is loosely (and arguably incorrectly) derived from the Millennium Cohort Study. Thanks to /u/crownjewel82 and /u/uselesstriviadude for doing the journalist's job for them and introducing me to this interesting dataset.

MattAlex99 on August 20th, 2018 at 13:47 UTC »

Can someone linke the actual study, I can't find it.

Picksley on August 20th, 2018 at 13:20 UTC »

I think it's worth pointing out that the Author of this has only been active for 2 months on that website and the majority of posts have been about children on the internet - from grooming to mental health.

The man seems to have been hired to bring traffic in and spark fear-mongering in parents (who had a different upbringing)

Correction: 5 months not 2, the articles are around the same nature