The moral lessons and examples of inclusiveness in children’s TV shows can go over their heads, according to new research.
In two separate studies, researchers monitored more than 100 4-6-year-olds of various ethnicities from urban and rural areas in the United States and the Netherlands while they watched popular children’s television shows.
They found that, in some instances, viewing a television show positively influenced children’s sense of fairness and right and wrong, such as with theft or interpersonal violence. More complex ideas, however, proved difficult for them to comprehend. Furthermore, nuance may backfire, causing children to behave poorly in their own lives because they don’t understand the nuanced solutions presented in the show.
Add 30 seconds of explanation?
For this reason, researchers recommend that children’s programs contain inserts with brief but explicit explanations or discussions of the lessons presented in the show, such as inclusion. When researchers experimented with inserted explanations, children’s responses improved.
“Just putting 30 seconds of explanation in the program helped the children to understand what the lessons were in a 12-minute segment,” says Drew P. Cingel, assistant professor of communication at the University of California, Davis and the lead author of the two recent studies.
He explains that the researchers’ inserts were simple, but presented messages literally rather than metaphorically, which promoted prosocial intentions and decreased stigmatization of others.
Theory of mind
The research explored “theory of mind,” which refers to an individual’s ability to attribute mental states to oneself and others, and to further understand that others have mental states that differ from their own. Theory of mind undergoes rapid development during preschool years, making the research especially relevant, the article says. Children low in theory of mind were those most positively influenced by the explicit inserts.
“This could make a big difference and has such practical implications. I just think of what a significant role media could have in child development—among children that need the most help—with this one improvement.” The researchers plan follow-up studies, says Cingel.
More airtime for problems than solutions
Most children who did not see the explicit insert expressed more exclusionary attitudes toward other children. In the scenarios in one study, one child was using crutches, another used a wheelchair, and yet another was obese. One child appeared to have an “average body type” without disabilities. Most children who answered questions about the characters said these children with disabilities were not as smart as others, and they expressed other negative feelings about the characters’ differences, demonstrating that lessons of inclusivity may be difficult for many children to comprehend.
Cingel says these misunderstandings made sense when one considers that in 12 minutes of content, children often see nine minutes of exclusionary behavior or a problem being presented with only three minutes or less of a solution. The solutions presented, then, often don’t resonate with the child viewer in a positive way. And in most cases, the studies show, the program reinforced or suggested stereotypes and increased stigmatization, rather than educating children to behave otherwise, especially when they viewed the show with other children.
Cingel, director of the UC Davis Human Development and Media Lab, says he hopes the research prompts changes in children’s programming. “I want this to matter in the lives of kids, not just academics,” he says.
The article that examined moral issues appears in Communication Research. It received support from the Mister Rogers Memorial Scholarship for Research. Cingel’s coauthor on that paper is Marina Krcmar, professor at Wake Forest University.
The second article appears in Media Psychology. Cingel’s coauthors are from the University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands and UC Davis.
Source: UC Davis
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