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The Remote, the Mouse, and the No. 2 Pencil
The Household Media Environment and Academic Achievement Among Third Grade Students
Dina L. G. Borzekowski, EdD;
Thomas N. Robinson, MD, MPH
Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2005;159:607-613.
Background Media can influence aspects of a childs physical, social, and cognitive development; however, the associations between a childs household media environment, media use, and academic achievement have yet to be determined.
Objective To examine relationships among a childs household media environment, media use, and academic achievement.
Methods During a single academic year, data were collected through classroom surveys and telephone interviews from an ethnically diverse sample of third grade students and their parents from 6 northern California public elementary schools. The majority of our analyses derive from spring 2000 data, including academic achievement assessed through the mathematics, reading, and language arts sections of the Stanford Achievement Test. We fit linear regression models to determine the associations between variations in household media and per-formance on the standardized tests, adjusting for demographic and media use variables.
Results The household media environment is significantly associated with students performance on the standardized tests. It was found that having a bedroom television set was significantly and negatively associated with students test scores, while home computer access and use were positively associated with the scores. Regression models significantly predicted up to 24% of the variation in the scores. Absence of a bedroom television combined with access to a home computer was consistently associated with the highest standardized test scores.
Conclusion This study adds to the growing literature reporting that having a bedroom television set may be detrimental to young elementary school children. It also suggests that having and using a home computer may be associated with better academic achievement.
Author Affiliations: Department of Population and Family Health Sciences, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Md (Dr Borzekowski); and Division of General Pediatrics, Department of Pediatrics and Stanford Prevention Research Center, Department of Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, Calif (Dr Robinson).
Financial Disclosure: Neither author has advisory board affiliations or financial interests in organizations sponsoring the research.
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