*The following is excerpted from an online article posted on MediaPost.
According to a new study, most parents allow their children to take their Internet-connected devices to bed, but most also put a limit on how much time their children can spend using those devices per day.
The study, conducted by OnePoll for Intel Security, comprised a survey of 13,000 adults who use an Internet-connected device on a daily basis. Consumers were surveyed in Australia, Brazil, Canada, France, Germany, India, Italy, Japan, Mexico, the Netherlands, Singapore, Spain, the U.K. and the U.S.
The majority (76%) of parents allow their child to bring an Internet-connected device to bed and almost a third (32%) of parents monitor their child’s use of the device in the bedroom.
Overall, almost all (90%) parents typically put a limit on how much time their child can spend using Internet-connected devices each day. Here’s how much time children are allowed per day:
- 48% — One to two hours
- 21% — Less than one hour
- 21% — Three to four hours
- 6% — More than four hours
- 5% — No time limit
Weekends are slightly different, with 12% of parents saying children should have unlimited device usage.
When parents don’t allow their child to take their Internet-connected devices to bed, most (60%) encounter no issues.
To monitor device usage, more than a third (36%) of parents keep the device in their possession and give it to their child when they are there to monitor, while 23% use software to monitor online behavior.
Source: MediaPost
http://www.mediapost.com/publications/article/293589/90-of-parents-put-time-limit-on-child-use-of-inte.html
Source: Home Word