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School children have too much phone time, not enough play time

UNSW Sydney

7 November 2019: An overwhelming majority of Australians (nearly 92 per cent) believe smartphones and other media have reduced the physical activity levels and outdoor play time of children.

And an almost identical number of people believe play helps children to build skills like collaboration, self-control and problem solving that are required for the changing future, new survey results reveal.

Released on Outdoor Classroom Day, a new attitudinal research for UNSW Sydney’s Gonski Institute for Education finds most people agree school students do not spend enough time on play.

Social media is seen by more than 77 per cent of people as such a distraction to school children that it results in negative impacts to their wellbeing and family relationships.

The findings from the national survey define community attitudes to areas of research the Gonski Institute is investigating, including to understand how more time for free outdoor play affects student learning and wellbeing.

They also coincide with an academic event the Institute is hosting on the benefits of learning through play in school involving researchers from around the world.

The survey results released today found most people believe too much pressure is placed on children to grow up quickly in a modern world, holding them back from effective learning and healthy development.

Institute Research Director, Professor Pasi Sahlberg, a renowned international education expert, said the new attitudinal results resonate with academic research in relation to the benefits of free outdoor play and how children today spend much longer watching digital screens, play less outdoors, and have a shorter night’s sleep than a decade ago.

“Australian children spend much longer hours in school than their peers in most other countries and still have less time for unstructured play during the school day. These new findings reveal a total of 85 per cent of parents say kids today spend less time playing than they did when they were their children’s age,” Professor Sahlberg said.

“It is clear the vast majority of adults highly value benefits of play for children’s wellbeing and development, and this matches up with what we know from overseas research and what we are doing here. Learning through play may be the most effective and easiest way to help all children to learn collaboration, problem-solving, resiliency, creativity and empathy which are all highly desired future job skills.”

Although the vast majority of respondents acknowledge the importance of play, parents are divided on how much break time children should have. Half of the parents surveyed want less break time at school for kids each day, while 40 per cent believe children should have more break time during school days.

“What is fascinating is that while this whole area around the benefits of play and the impacts of devices are little understood at a policy level, the results match with the available research knowledge. And that is why the Gonski Institute is doing deeper, Australian-based research into these areas with various collaborators including LEGO,” Professor Sahlberg said.

Three out of four Australians say the first few years of schooling should focus more on learning through play than they do now.

And more than 90 per cent believe smartphones and other media have reduced time that children have for daily physical activity and active outdoor play, with a majority saying social media harms children’s wellbeing and their family relationships.

“Smartphones certainly have a role to play in all our lives but at the right times and in the right ways,” Professor Sahlberg said. “I think society is only catching up to the impacts of technology and social media on children and there needs to be some controls around this.”

“Having been part of building the current education system in Finland and having worked in education policy and research all my life, I am excited by my work here in Australia because domestic research into this type of interaction is crucial to provide evidence to better focus on whole-child development.”

/Public Release.