About this item
Highlights
- Ditch the devices and bring back the magic of being a kid Screens are everywhere.
- Foreword INDIES Book of the Year Awards (Family & Relationships) 2024 3rd Winner
- About the Author: Katherine Martinko is an editor and writer with a decade of experience in digital news publishing.
- 176 Pages
- Family + Relationships, Parenting
Description
About the Book
Regulating children's use of digital media. More time spent offline will benefit their resilience, independence, and family relationships.
Book Synopsis
Ditch the devices and bring back the magic of being a kid
Screens are everywhere. Children spend an average of 7.5 hours on digital devices every day with profoundly negative consequences. While some tech may "amplify" real-life experience, the vast majority undermines it by limiting physical activity, creating anxiety, or damaging self-esteem. Childhood Unplugged takes a bold approach to creating healthy boundaries around the use of digital media.
Drawing on her own family's experience, plus interviews with digital minimalists, educators, and child development experts, Katherine Martinko presents:
- Meticulously researched analysis of the impacts of excessive screen time on children's physical, neurological, emotional, and social developmentSpecific pathways to reduced screen exposure, naturally leading to more time spent outdoors, increased confidence and empathy, and more creative and active playInspiration for caregivers overwhelmed by the thought of severing ties with the digital babysitterAge-appropriate advice for parents of babies and toddlers, school-aged children, and adolescents.
Taking a calming, nonjudgmental approach, Childhood Unplugged is a lifeline for parents, caregivers, educators, and anyone who questions the role of digital media and yearns for the young people in their life to experience the profound beauty and magic of childhood.
AWARDS
- FINALIST 2023 Foreword INDIES Awards: Family & Relationships
From the Back Cover
Ditch the devices and bring back the magic of being a kid
Mandatory reading for all parents.
--Catherine Price, author, How to Break Up With Your Phone
The rallying cry we have been waiting for.
--Linda Åkeson McGurk, author, There's No Such Thing as Bad Weather
Screens are everywhere. Children spend an average of 7.5 hours on digital devices every day with profoundly negative consequences. While some tech may "amplify" real-life experience, the vast majority undermines it by limiting physical activity, creating anxiety, or damaging self-esteem. Childhood Unplugged takes a bold approach to creating healthy boundaries around the use of digital media.
Drawing on her own family's experience, plus interviews with digital minimalists, educators, and child development experts, Katherine Martinko presents:
- Meticulously researched analysis of the impacts of excessive screen time on children's physical, neurological, emotional, and social development
- Specific pathways to reduced screen exposure, naturally leading to more time spent outdoors, increased confidence and empathy, and more creative and active play
- Inspiration for caregivers overwhelmed by the thought of severing ties with the digital babysitter
- Age-appropriate advice for parents of babies and toddlers, school-aged children, and adolescents.
Taking a calming, nonjudgmental approach, Childhood Unplugged is a lifeline for parents, caregivers, educators, and anyone who questions the role of digital media and yearns for the young people in their life to experience the profound beauty and magic of childhood.
A must-read book for parents in our time.
--Loreena McKennitt, founder, Stolen Child Project
Essential reading for the analog warrior, or even those seeking a bit more balance from too many screens.
--David Sax, bestselling author, The Revenge of Analog
Katherine Johnson Martinko writes extensively about free-range parenting and low-impact living. She is a former senior editor at Treehugger -- major green lifestyle site -- and previously wrote for Discovery Network. She lives in Port Elgin, Ontario.
Review Quotes
"...solid ideas for reducing digital dependency."
-Publishers Weekly
"... a helpful guide for parents who hope to curb their family's electronic habits."
-Foreword Reviews
"Real-world tools for parents to declutter their minds and set up safeguards to put themselves in control of digital technology. A digital minimalist's must-have guide to launching your kids into a life of real connectedness and authenticity."
-Joshua Becker, #1 Wall Street Journal bestselling author, Things That Matter
"Katherine Martinko has written a treatise no parent should miss. How do we protect and enhance the humanity of our children in an age where they've been so recklessly bombarded with unfettered technology? This is a must-read book for parents in our time."
-Loreena McKennitt, Founder, Stolen Child Project
"Martinko expertly and urgently takes us deeper into the hidden horrors of too much screen time on the growing child. Then she throws us all a life preserver with the most practical, gentle advice I've seen."
-Angela Hanscom, author, Balanced and Barefoot: How Unrestricted Outdoor Play Makes for Strong, Confident, and Capable Children
"In an age defined by hyper-digitalization and screen-time overload, Katherine Martinko offers a radical alternative by ditching the electronic devices and giving her children a play-filled, outdoorsy, analog childhood. [This] is the rallying cry we have been waiting for."
-Linda Åkeson McGurk, author, There's No Such Thing as Bad Weather and The Open-Air Life
"Katherine Martinko makes the case that not only is a screen-free childhood possible, but reducing our children's time on screen is essential for their happiness, sanity, and health. Thoroughly researched and beautifully written, it should be mandatory reading for all parents."
-Catherine Price, founder, ScreenLifeBalance.com, author, How to Break Up with Your Phone
About the Author
Katherine Martinko is an editor and writer with a decade of experience in digital news publishing. She was a senior editor at Treehugger, an internationally respected environmental lifestyle site. Katherine previously wrote for Discovery Network's Parentables website and maintained a popular parenting blog. Many of the thousands of articles she has written over the years explore the importance of raising "offline" kids, teaching them to become resilient and independent, and being wary of the profound effects of too much screen time on developing brains. Katherine is an honors graduate of the University of Toronto, where she studied English and history. She speaks four languages, is a classically trained violinist, an award-winning public speaker, and a community leader who spearheaded a major refugee resettlement effort in her own small town. Katherine lives with her husband and three children in Port Elgin, Ontario. Find her at https: //feistyredhair.com.