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/Current Events SpongeBob makes kids stupid random thoughts Send a noteboard - 12/09/2011 05:05:21 PM
Yes the title is a little over the top but as the father of three I didn't need a study to know that some shows over stimulate kids. When my boys were younger I had to stop letting them watch Power Rangers because they would get so amped up watching it. I don't support censoring shows but parents need to be aware of the affect they can have on thier kids and if a show isn't made for four year olds they should sell Sponge Bob shirts in size 3T

By LINDSEY TANNER


CHICAGO (AP) - The cartoon character SpongeBob SquarePants is in hot water from a study suggesting that watching just nine minutes of that program can cause short-term attention and learning problems in 4-year-olds.

The problems were seen in a study of 60 children randomly assigned to either watch "SpongeBob," or the slower-paced PBS cartoon "Caillou" or assigned to draw pictures. Immediately after these nine-minute assignments, the kids took mental function tests; those who had watched "SpongeBob" did measurably worse than the others.

Previous research has linked TV-watching with long-term attention problems in children, but the new study suggests more immediate problems can occur after very little exposure - results that parents of young kids should be alert to, the study authors said.

Kids' cartoon shows typically feature about 22 minutes of action, so watching a full program "could be more detrimental," the researchers speculated, But they said more evidence is needed to confirm that.

The results should be interpreted cautiously because of the study's small size, but the data seem robust and bolster the idea that media exposure is a public health issue, said Dr. Dimitri Christakis. He is a child development specialist at Seattle Children's Hospital who wrote an editorial accompanying the study published online Monday in the journal Pediatrics.

Christakis said parents need to realize that fast-paced programming may not be appropriate for very young children. "What kids watch matters, it's not just how much they watch," he said.

University of Virginia psychology professor Angeline Lillard, the lead author, said Nickelodeon's "SpongeBob" shouldn't be singled out. She found similar problems in kids who watched other fast-paced cartoon programming.

She said parents should realize that young children are compromised in their ability to learn and use self-control immediately after watching such shows. "I wouldn't advise watching such shows on the way to school or any time they're expected to pay attention and learn," she said.

Nickelodeon spokesman David Bittler disputed the findings and said "SpongeBob SquarePants" is aimed at kids aged 6-11, not 4-year-olds.

"Having 60 non-diverse kids, who are not part of the show's targeted (audience), watch nine minutes of programming is questionable methodology and could not possibly provide the basis for any valid findings that parents could trust," he said.

Lillard said 4-year-olds were chosen because that age "is the heart of the period during which you see the most development" in certain self-control abilities. Whether children of other ages would be similarly affected can't be determined from this study.

Most kids were white and from middle-class or wealthy families. They were given common mental function tests after watching cartoons or drawing. The SpongeBob kids scored on average 12 points lower than the other two groups, whose scores were nearly identical.

In another test, measuring self-control and impulsiveness, kids were rated on how long they could wait before eating snacks presented when the researcher left the room. "SpongeBob" kids waited about 2 1/2 minutes on average, versus at least four minutes for the other two groups.

The study has several limitations. For one thing, the kids weren't tested before they watched TV. But Lillard said none of the children had diagnosed attention problems and all got similar scores on parent evaluations of their behavior.



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/Current Events SpongeBob makes kids stupid - 12/09/2011 05:05:21 PM 402 Views
hah about time someone said it! *NM* - 12/09/2011 05:24:06 PM 79 Views
I wouldn't be surprised in the slightest. But what a sloppy study. *NM* - 12/09/2011 10:11:41 PM 73 Views
how so? - 12/09/2011 10:41:42 PM 185 Views
Just as you said. No control. *NM* - 13/09/2011 07:15:48 AM 73 Views
I assumed the kids drawing the pics were the control group *NM* - 13/09/2011 01:40:34 PM 78 Views
There's also the fact that the group was so homogenous. - 13/09/2011 10:42:42 AM 192 Views
Homogenous groups are better to test shit with - 13/09/2011 01:16:44 PM 172 Views
no single test can prove something like this - 13/09/2011 01:59:42 PM 199 Views
Read it earlier, sounds horribly unscientific, but it falls in line with what i would have thought. *NM* - 12/09/2011 10:26:06 PM 63 Views
how so? - 12/09/2011 11:22:18 PM 171 Views
I have a soft-spot for Spongebob. - 12/09/2011 10:27:21 PM 180 Views
my boys loved Spongebob - 12/09/2011 10:43:21 PM 172 Views
It's definitely better for older kids. *NM* - 12/09/2011 10:51:34 PM 70 Views
to be fair to the show's producers... - 12/09/2011 11:10:41 PM 182 Views
yes but at that age you can do the same thing with Mickey Mouse Club House - 12/09/2011 11:29:28 PM 180 Views
that was mostly a joke - 13/09/2011 04:03:04 AM 181 Views
I'm more interested in which seasons of Spongebob do that - 12/09/2011 11:13:55 PM 195 Views
I don't think it is the quality of the jokes that are the problem - 12/09/2011 11:27:23 PM 190 Views
True facts. *NM* - 13/09/2011 02:02:05 AM 75 Views

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