Authors
Alexis Hiniker, Sarita Y Schoenebeck, Julie A Kientz
Publication date
2016/2/27
Book
Proceedings of the 19th ACM conference on computer-supported cooperative work & social computing
Pages
1376-1389
Description
Parents and children both use technology actively and increasingly, but prior work shows that concerns about attention, family time, and family relationships abound. We conducted a survey with 249 parent-child pairs distributed across 40 U.S. states to understand the types of technology rules (also known as restrictive mediation) they have established in their family and how effective those rules are perceived to be. Our data robustly show that children (age 10-17) are more likely to follow rules that constrain technology activities (e.g., no Snapchat) than rules that constrain technology use in certain contexts (e.g., no phone at the dinner table). Children find context constraints harder to live up to, parents find them harder to enforce, and parents' most common challenge when trying to enforce such rules is that children -can't put it down.- This is consistent with the idea that banning certain technologies is currently easier …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
A Hiniker, SY Schoenebeck, JA Kientz - Proceedings of the 19th ACM conference on computer …, 2016