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Childhood pastimes are increasingly moving indoors

 

http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2005-07-11-pastimes-childhood_x.htm

http://tinyurl.com/a935h

 

By Dennis Cauchon, USA TODAY

Posted 7/12/2005 12:01 AM

Updated 7/12/2005 3:12 AM

 

BELLBROOK, Ohio Being a kid isn't what it used to be.

 

Dakota Howell, 9, went fishing in this town of 7,000 the other day with his mom, dad and little brother. "It's fun," he says, happily reeling in sunfish from Spring Lake during a fishing derby sponsored by Wal-Mart.

 

But, to be honest, he'd rather be doing something else: playing video games. "That was my first choice," he confides. "But mom says they rot your brain."

 

Misty Pollock, his mother, smiles. "When I was a kid, we wanted to be outdoors," she says. "Today, you have to push kids outside."

 

The fundamental nature of American childhood has changed in a single generation. The unstructured outdoor childhood days of pick-up baseball games, treehouses and "be home for dinner" has all but vanished.

 

Today, childhood is spent mostly indoors, watching television, playing video games and working the Internet. When children do go outside, it tends to be for scheduled events soccer camp or a fishing derby held under the watch of adults. In a typical week, 27% of kids ages 9 to 13 play organized baseball, but only 6% play on their own, a survey by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found.

 

The shift to an indoor childhood has accelerated in the past decade, with huge declines in spontaneous outdoor activities such as bike riding, swimming and touch football, according to separate studies by the National Sporting Goods Association, a trade group, and American Sports Data, a research firm. Bike riding alone is down 31% since 1995.

 

A child is six times more likely to play a video game on a typical day than to ride a bike, according to surveys by the Kaiser Family Foundation and the CDC. Dakota Howell says his favorite video game Tony Hawk's Pro Skater is more fun than actual skateboarding.

 

The change can be seen in children's bodies. In the 1960s, 4% of kids were obese. Today, 16% are overweight, according to the CDC. It can be seen in their brains. Studies indicate that children who spend lots of time outdoors have longer attention spans than kids who watch lots of television and play video games, says Frances Kuo, director of the Human-Environment Research Laboratory at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

 

"New research indicates that our intuition is right: Kids are spending way too much time with media and not enough time outside," Kuo says.

 

The lure of television and video games isn't the only thing keeping kids indoors. Parents are more afraid of letting kids roam in a world of heavy traffic and reports of pedophiles and missing children. A 41% decline in the birth rate since 1960 means smaller packs of kids roam neighborhoods. Air-conditioning means kids don't need the local pool or swimming hole to cool off.

 

"Boundaries for kids used to be measured by blocks or miles. Now, the boundary for most kids is the front yard. A lot of kids are under house arrest," says Richard Louv, author of Last Child in the Woods, a book about how children have lost touch with nature.

 

He says many parents fear the outdoors, whether it's letting a kid climb a tree or hike alone in the woods. "Parents think their kids are safer in front of the Xbox in the next room."

 

Home alone

 

Consider Jared Timmons and Cole Hillsamer, a pair of athletic 11-year-old friends from Beaver Creek, Ohio. The boys live in neighborhoods separated by a busy street neither is allowed to cross in their 38,000-resident town outside of Dayton.

 

During the school year, both boys got home about 2 p.m. and spent a couple hours alone. Cole flopped on his bed, watched MTV or the Dukes ofHazzard. Jared sat 2 miles away instant messaging friends and sometimes stepping outside to shoot baskets by himself.

 

The buddies were outdoors together at this month's fishing derby. Cole's mother, Janet Begley, drove them to the event and sat in a beach chair behind the boys reading Hidden Prey, a murder mystery.

 

She says she would never let her son play in the woods without an adult. She won't even let him go alone to the park down the street. "Parks are where pedophiles go," she says.

 

The mother pauses for a moment to recall her tomboy childhood. She rode her bike all over town. She played outdoors freely climbing trees, playing tag and kick the can. "Life for kids isn't what it used to be," she says.

 

Annabel North, 9, a bubbly Catholic school student, is fishing a few feet away. Last night, she had a sleepover at a friend's house and had a grand time trying to make grape jelly from juice and milk. She stayed up whispering until midnight discussing whether the Loch Ness monster is real.

 

But much of her time, she says, is spent by herself. "When I'm happy, I go outdoors. When I'm sad, I watch TV," she says.

 

Some days, Annabel says, she watches television from the moment she wakes up until the moment she goes to bed.

 

Is that boring? "No, it's not boring at all!" she exclaims, surprised by the silly question. "It's great. I don't miss anything."

 

Multimedia lives of children

 

In the 1960s, television broadcast 27 hours of children's programming a week, much of it shown simultaneously on Saturday morning. Today, there are 14 television networks aimed at children, and the most popular show with children, American Idol, isn't on any of them.

 

Children ages 8 to 10 spend an average of 6 hours a day watching television, playing video games and using computers, according to the Kaiser study. And that's during the school year. No study has been done on vacation habits, but TV ratings show kids watch more during the summer.

 

Childhood's outdoor pastimes are declining fast and the rate has accelerated in the past decade, especially the past five years, according to the National Sporting Goods Association (NSGA) annual survey of physical activity.

 

Since 1995, the portion of children ages 7 to 11 who swim, fish or play touch football has declined by about a third. Canoeing and water skiing are down by similar amounts.

 

The relationship between kids and their bikes is especially telling.

 

In 1995, 68% of children ages 7 to 11 rode a bike at least six times a year. Last year, only 47% did.

 

The sales of children's bikes fell from 12.4 million in 2000 to 9.8 million in 2004, a 21% decline, according to Bicycle Industry and Retailer News,an industry magazine.

 

"Bikes used to be empowering for children," says Marc Sani, publisher of the magazine. "My parents didn't care where I went as long as I was home for supper. Now, parents are afraid to let kids out of their sight."

 

Many kids have substituted skateboards and scooters to get around. But skateboards and scooters travel short distances and their use peaked in 2001 and 2002 respectively, according to the NSGA survey.

 

Children today tend to get outdoor exercise by appointment.

 

Soccer participation has been unchanged in the past decade about 28% of kids age 7 to 11 play the sport. Soccer leagues and soccer camps are in full bloom this summer, although non-organized soccer games are uncommon.

 

Organized outdoor activities have kept kids moving. They are declining but much more slowly that unstructured outdoor play.

 

Little League participation has fallen to 2.1 million children, down 14% from its peak in 1997. But overall baseball playing pick-up games, catch, pickle has declined nearly twice as fast, the NSGA surveys show.

 

"As a kid, I'd throw my glove on a bike and pedal 2 or 3 miles to the ball field for a pick-up game," says Little League spokesman Chris Downs, 33, in Williamsport, Pa. "That doesn't appeal to kids as much today. They have many other choices and not just video games."

 

In generations past, children's play tended to be open-ended, following whatever game or adventure a child's imagination could generate. Children and parents now prefer structured entertainment, whether it's a video game or a day at the pool.

 

Spring Valley Pool in Granville, Ohio, closed this year after 70 years. "Kids expect entertainment at a pool, not just pleasure or friendship," says Chip Gordon, whose family owned the pool. "Our 12-foot high dive couldn't compete with the jazzy stuff kids expect."

 

Kids specialize

 

Mike Morris, 20, a pole-vaulter at DePauw University in Greencastle, Ind., says the introduction of Nintendo 64 in 1996 was a seminal event in his generation's childhood. It introduced 3-D graphics, the joystick and the ability to play "shoot 'em up" games that allowed competing against friends. Almost overnight, play in his neighborhood shifted from outdoors to indoors. Some kids never really came back out, he says. Even those who did had their habits changed.

 

Morris often works out three hours a day at the gym, then returns to his dorm to play the Halo combat game against 20 fellow students sitting in their own dorm rooms nearby.

 

"My college memories are more likely to be a great move I put on to kill someone in Halo than a great move in pick-up basketball," he says. "It's kind of sad in a way."

 

Tracey Martin, 40, head of parks and recreation in Greenville, Ohio, says his athletic 14-year-old son spends a typical summer week playing basketball all day at basketball camp and playing soccer at night. But when his son is home, the boy spends his free time using computer chat rooms and playing cards over the Internet. "The funny thing is, I never see him play cards with his friends," his father says.

 

Many parents express dismay over the lives their children lead, but they aren't sure what to do.

 

Darrell Mueller, 54, runs the parks and recreation programs in North Platte, Neb. His childhood was spent outdoors playing ball, riding his bike and building forts. Even today, he hates being inside.

 

His children are the opposite. They prefer being driven to school, which is just two houses away.

 

His 11-year-old daughter, Ivy, spends hours instant messaging her friend across the street. He asks why she doesn't just go over and play with her friend. "This is more fun," his daughter explains.

 

Mueller's 16-year-old son, Taylor, spends nearly every waking hour in his room, playing the Warcraft fantasy game on the Internet with people from around the world.

 

"I call him the caveman because he never leaves his room," Mueller says. "He comes out now and then for dinner, but he can't eat with us. He has to get back to his game."

 

His son recently burst out of his room excited. His guild, or team, had earned a top ranking in Warcraft. The father didn't know what to say: Should he congratulate his son on his success or worry about what it meant?

 

Mueller pulls his son out of his room three times a week twice for a summer basketball league and on Sunday to mow the grass at the boy's grandfather's house. "In my day, we tried to get out of the house any way we could," Mueller says. "Now, you can't get kids outdoors."

 

In Bellbrook, the fishing derby ends at noon.

 

Dakota Howell and his brother John, 7, are ready to head home from Spring Lake. Dakota declares he wants to be an archaeologist because he loves getting his fingers dirty. John, carrying fishing rods, looks like a child in a Norman Rockwell painting. He has a big smile on his face.

 

"Now," he says, "we're going home to play video games."(This message has been edited by fgoodwin)

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The fundamental nature of American childhood has changed in a single generation. The unstructured outdoor childhood days of pick-up baseball games, treehouses and "be home for dinner" has all but vanished.

 

Today, childhood is spent mostly indoors, watching television, playing video games and working the Internet. When children do go outside, it tends to be for scheduled events soccer camp or a fishing derby held under the watch of adults. In a typical week, 27% of kids ages 9 to 13 play organized baseball, but only 6% play on their own, a survey by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found.

 

And childhood obesity has quadrupled! Makes you wonder, doesn't it.

 

Ed Mori

Troop 1

1 Peter 4:10

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Even yards around my neighborhood where I know kids live don't look the same. No swingsets, no basketball goals, no bikes. A kid today most likely wouldn't even know about forts and treehouses.

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Here are but a few of the things that have taken the outside world away from kids.

 

Both parents working

West Nile virus

Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever

Lime Disease

Skin Cancer

Child Molesters

 

So, things really have changed.

FB

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A recent article in the paper said we can't use the word "obese"...it's too harsh and hurts their self-esteem.

 

I agree! Let's call them what they are - FAT!

 

Here are but a few of the things that have taken the outside world away from kids.

 

Both parents working

West Nile virus

Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever

Lime Disease

Skin Cancer

Child Molesters

 

So, things really have changed.

 

Excuses not reasons. Over protecting your kids is just as bad for them as not protecting them at all!

 

Ed Mori

Troop 1

1 Peter 4:10

 

 

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I grew up in the 50's and 60's. What were we exposed to?

 

Polio

Chicken Pox

Measles

Mumps

typhoid/tetanus (from swimming in flooded streets)

Broken arms

Sunburn (routinely and severely)

Second hand smoke (at home and in the car - constantly)

No seat belts or airbags

Cars filled with sharp chrome stuff

Jellyfish

Heat (no A/C in school)

Killer toys (like arrows, BB guns and gasp-sheath knives)

Child molesters (my wife was a victim - her best friend's father)

Dirt and germs

 

So tell me again why it's worse now?(This message has been edited by scoutldr)

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I grew up in the 50's and 60's. We did not have the kind of organized baseball, football, soccer, cheerleading, dance, music, computer, space, and every other kind of camp that we now have, of course, unless your daddy was a doctor. I built several clubhouses, rode my bicycle all over the place, sold Scout Show tickets to hundreds of people I didn't know and liked to have killed myself with my own homemade rocket. (I wanted to be first or second to the moon.)

 

We took our lumps with all of the childhood diseases. Polio was sugar cubed away.

Milk was cancerous only for a short period of time and we worried for years about not having a Fall-out shelter. Fake sugar did kill but only after bucooo rats died to save us all. Typhoid was not seen as much of a threat as tetanus and we had shots for both after every nail in the foot. We sanded the jellyfish stings. We avoided dogs that foamed at the mouth but bats have smaller mouths, so we are not as aware today. The killer toys fell by parental dictate and societal pressures one by one. We survived no seatbelts, no front and side airbags and chrome thingees but statistics will show that many didn't.

Broken arms are still around but far fewer incidents because we no longer have playground equipment that is 20 feet off the ground. We now have anti-bacterial soap and doctors filling kids so full of anti-viral drugs that even the germs are immune.

The priests were not even counseled to stop molesting children until the 90's.

 

The things I listed earlier have no known cure and the disease process have long term effects that includes both parents working full time and child molesters that are repeatedly set free. These "excuses" should be a concern by any thinking person in the new century because parents and kids are more informed, remember it is the Information Age not the old Milk and Toast days of the 50's.

 

I still believe the Scout program is the best answer and it uses care to avoid these problems. It also helps kids to become physically fit, as well as a couple of other goals that are important.

 

FB

 

(This message has been edited by Fuzzy Bear)

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At 43 I'm "The Oldest man in the World" according to my daughter.

 

Some of that stuff in the USA Today is just plain old bad parenting. Some of it I am guilty of.

 

Take the @$$%&&*&%^*(, #$%#^&**(^# game boy away for a day!!!!! Take it away for the week and you'll be amazed at what kids find to do. Plan family game nights. Get a board game and gather around the kitchen table and roll the dice!!

 

As far as outside stuff: that is why our Scouting programs must be robust. Sure, include kids with wheel chairs but the kids that can walk can and should be encouraged to do so.

 

We just had a Scout trip that included a walk up Tongue Mountain. Only one kid in the Troop went. Pitiful.

 

My wife went to a teachers Conference about fitness and the speaker began by saying. "Kids no longer have scabs..."

I agree.

 

How many kids have ever played a baseball game where an overbearing parent was not in attendance.

 

Look at the boys in your Troop. How much upper body stength do they have?

What is the average number of pull ups each scout can do?

The Empire is in Trouble.

 

 

 

My son is 11 and he has never used a rope swing to go swimming. But he surely knows how to get to the fifth level in his favorite video game and get the magic key so he can kill the motleys and rescue the Queen of planet Bubniak.

 

We need Scouting more than ever.

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