Screen-Free Week: How To Survive and Why It's Worth It

Published: April 24, 2019, 11:51 a.m.

b"We all know it: our kids are on screens too much. And us parents? Well, if you haven't used Apple's Screen Time function yet, prepare to be horrified. \\nSo have you ever considered a cold-turkey no-screens experiment in your home? Screen Free Week is coming up, and it gives us the perfect opportunity to present the idea to our families. \\nBut no, you might be saying. We couldn't possibly. My kids would fight! We need that down time! There's all that candy to crush!\\nAnd to that we say, fear not, because we did it first. And we are here to tell you that you won't just find hours of time- you will, as Margaret put it, see entire bandwidths of your children's brains come alive that you hadn't even realized were asleep.\\nIn this episode we discuss how to sell screen-free week to the kids, how to prepare, how to survive, and why we think it's worth it! \\nHere are links to resources and research discussed in this episode:\\nscreenfree.org\\n unpluggedfamily.org\\nscreenlifebalance.com\\nKevin Roose for NYT: Do Not Disturb: How I Ditched My Phone and Unbroke My Brain\\n\\nTaylor Lorenz for The Atlantic: The Hottest Chat App for Teens Is \\u2026 Google Docs\\n\\nDaily Mail: Smartphones, tablets causing mental health issues in kids as young as two\\n\\nDr. Jean Twenge for The Atlantic: Have Smartphones Destroyed a Generation?\\n\\nDr. Jean Twenge for The Conversation: Teens have less face time with their friends \\u2013 and are lonelier than ever\\n\\nDr. Craig Canapari: Prevent Sleep Problems in Kids: Keep Technology Out of The Bedroom\\nErika Christakis for The Atlantic: The Dangers of Distracted Parenting\\n\\nCatherine Price: How to Break Up With Your Phone\\n\\nCal Newport: Digital Minimalism: Choosing a Focused Life in a Noisy World \\n\\nLeigh Stringer: On the Importance of Boredom\\nLearn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices"