Investigate
http://www.nick.com.au/shows
and link to primary aged children.
theoretically analyse
http://www.nick.com.au/shows
- children or young people might access.
Your understandings for this analysis will stem from the unit readings, lectures and tutorials and your own research.
You are expected to incorporate readings and appropriate references to key theorists in your analysis. It is vital that you move beyond describing the websites to a critical analysis of them.
Unraveling new media's effects on children (apa.org)
Cartoons’ Effect in Changing Children Mental Response and Behavior Open Journal of Social Sciences, 2015, 3, 248-264 Published Online September 2015 in SciRes. http://www.scirp.org/journal/jss http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/jss.2015.39033 How to cite this paper: Habib, K. and Soliman, T. (2015) Cartoons’ Effect in Changing Children Mental Response and Beha- vior. Open Journal of Social Sciences, 3, 248-264. http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/jss.2015.39033 Cartoons’ Effect in Changing Children Mental Response and Behavior Khaled Habib, Tarek Soliman Jilam Studios PMO, Alexandria, Egypt Email: [email protected] Received 4 August 2015; accepted 20 September 2015; published 23 September 2015 Copyright © 2015 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution International License (CC BY). http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Abstract Factors that sculpture children’s way of thinking are found mostly in the environment where they grow up. These include daily events, memorable experiences and peak feelings. Cartoons are one of the daily habits for our children; studies have proven that an average child with a facility of a TV and a satellite connection at his home watches approximately 18,000 hours of television from kindergarten to high school graduation. How does this experience affect our children minds? Does it have positive or negative effects? What types of contents are delivered to our kids in a cartoo- nish show? Are all shows trustable, or shall parents pay monitoring attention to the TV shows? How does our children brain absorb and analysis information in the first place? These questions and others will be answered through this survey-experimental research [1] [2]. Keywords Children, Behaviour, Media, Cartoon, Violence, Sex, Mental, Raising 1. Introduction Cartoons have been a part of cinema history from the time the first motion pictures were made in the late 1800s. A cartoon is a movie made by using animation instead of live actors, especially a humorous film intended for children (Thompson, 2010). Cartoons can also be described as the making of movies by filming a sequence of slightly varying drawings or models so that they appear to move and change when the sequence is shown. These are the elements that keep viewers, (mostly children) glued to their seats. Cartoons were initially so short be- cause people would be watching these shorts in the movie theatres before their feature film. When cartoonists could put their shows on TV, they began to get longer, creating the half hour block shows that are on Nick- elodeon, Cartoon Network, and the Disney Channel today. Also, the cartoons had to become more “family friendly” so that more people would watch their show (Kapelian, 2009). http://www.scirp.org/journal/jss http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/jss.2015.39033 http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/jss.2015.39033 http://www.scirp.org mailto:[email protected] http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ K. Habib, T. Soliman 249 Objective: The objective of the paper is to determine the effect of cartoon in changing the mentality & beha- viour of school going children, and the drawbacks in some of the current cartoon TV shows criteria that follow [3]. 2. Cartoon Time in Our Children’s Schedule In a research performed by the researcher Kayla Bois & Brad Bushman “Michigan University”, they summed up the cartoon content in our Children Schedules as follows: • 2 - 5 years old children watch cartoon 32 hrs. Weekly. • 6 - 11 years old children watch cartoon 28 hrs. Weekly. And they stated that: • 71% of 8 - 18 years old has a TV in their rooms. • 53% of 7 - 12 years old has no parental monitoring for what being watched on TV. • 51% of homes: TV is switched on most of time. Another research performed by researcher Sharmin “BRAC University”, concluded: • Most parents prefer to leave their children in front of TV in order to finish their Work or to have a rest. • Putting a child in front of the TV is the best way for a parent to make their child eat their food. 3. How Does Child’s Brain Develop & Work? In a research published on UNICEF’s official website, says that there are 3 factors in Child brain development worldwide: 1) There are strong relations between the genes and the brain development; however, the surrounding expe- rience is what sculptures how the brain will function. 2) Thinking and imagination are of the most factors that affect the functionality of the brain till the age of 12. 3) Early mind setting is the secret, once done, children pattern of future actions could be predicted. He concluded how human brain “grow” and “work” in early stage as shown in Table 1 below. It was once believed that the brain’s development was pre-determined through genes, and that it growth fol- lowed an already determined path > modern research proves that experiences at early ages has an effect on the development of the brain and affects the way which the internal circuits of the brain become connected to each other, which means that a baby’s brain is still under development. Sean Brotherson says: “A child’s brain is like a house that has just been built. The walls are up, the doors are hung. Then you go to the store and buy electrical wiring, switches, a fuse box and other electrical supplies, you bring these supplies to the new house and set them on the floor. Will they work? Probably not. You first must string the wiring and hook up all of the connections. This is quite similar to the way our brains are formed.” The nerve brain cells that an individual is born are as much as 10 times the number of stars in the Milky way Galaxy, or 20 times the number of people on earth, despite that, we will not grow any more than these. But till the day of birth, these cells are still not connected together nor formed a link [1] (Figure 1). Neurons are the processor of the brain; a neuron is a branched cell body. These branches receive chemical Table 1. Myths & facts of human development studies [1]. Myth Fact At birth the brain is fully developed, just like heart or stomach. Most of the brain’s cells are formed before birth, but most of the connections among cells are made during infancy and early childhood. The brain’s development depends entirely on the genes with which you are born. Early experience and interaction with the environment are most critical in a child’s brain development. A toddler’s brain is less active than the brain of a college student. A 3-year-old toddler’s brain is twice as active as an adult’s brain. Talking to a baby is not important because he or she can’t understand what you are saying. Talking to young children establishes foundations for learning language during early critical periods when learning is easiest for a child. Children need special help and specific educational toys to develop their brainpower. What children need most is love, care and new experiences, not special attention or costly toys. Talking, singing, playing and reading are some of the key activities that build a child’s brain. K. Habib, T. Soliman 250 Figure 1. Density of neurons in the human brain at different ages. signals across the brain, and the impulse travels across the axon. Each Axon has a bag containing neurotrans- mitters at its end. The electrical impulse releases the neuron transmitter which stimulates nearby branches. Each cell can connect with about other 15,000 Cells. This network is scientifically named the brain’s Circui- try or the brain’s wiring. Experience aids in forming the shape of this network a noticeable developing in the synapses occurs during the first year after birth. The brain then develops architecture through the increase of these Synapses Sean Brotherson mentions in his research “For example, if a parent repeatedly calls a child a certain name, then connections will form that allow the child to recognize that name over time as referring to him and he will learn to respond. From birth” [1]. These connections that are formed by the brain create our habits, way of thinking, memories and mind. At the age of 3, a toddlers brain would have created about thousand trillion Synapses, which is nearly double what he would have when he grow to an adult. The connections that are created in a children’s brain are wither strengthen by repeating experience, or are weakened by not being used. Starting at the age of 11, kids start losing the connections that are not used. The ones that are enforced through repeated experiences, does affect the child brain structure and sculpture his way of thinking. From the above facts we conclude that: The first experience has its mandatory stamp in the Children’s Brain Structure, and consequently the Child’s way of thinking and behaviour. Any experience however less frequent it still has its effect on the brain structure, however repeated actions till the age of 12 are high effective and leave their life time effect. Experience to the child is what he watches with his eyes, hear with his ears and live through his feelings. Concluding these above three facts, and the fact that till the age of 12 a child would have watched about 18,000 Hours of Cartoon; this means that the cartoon is one of the main factors that sculpture the human brain, resulting in a predetermined set of way of thinking and behavior. 4. How Are Children Affected with Cartoons, Why? ... To What Extent? Which is better and more relevant that the child would learn from, academic books and teacher, or from a an animated TV Series? In the research in “Michigan University” performed by Sharmin, she said that children are attracted to the cartoon content much more than the academic traditional ways of learning, due to the well written scenarios, au- dio & visual effects and colors. These factors are enough to cause the child to absorb information dozens better than that absorbed from a teacher in a classroom [3]. Child’s brain at