How Violence in the Media Affects Children

1615 Words4 Pages

How Violence in the Media Affects Children

Have you ever looked at someone and thought, I wonder what made him/her the way she is today?” When you do this, you often have to look back on a person’s childhood. How did certain events affect them? Over time violence has become dramatically evident is children’s lives. Parents do not seem to be careful with their children’s viewing habits. They are beginning to let them watch whatever is on TV. For example: Family guy, all those shows on Adult swim. These violent TV programs could cause so many problems for the children and parents later on in life. Parents should carefully monitor children’s viewing habits so they have limited exposure to violence, increase their physical activity, and decrease aggressive behavior.

To begin with, parents should carefully monitor their children’s viewing habits, because the body of empirical research connecting children's exposure to media violence with subsequent increases in their aggressive and violent behavior was already above average by the 1970s (Bushman, & Huesmann 6). Infrequent exposure is not likely to produce lasting consequences, but parents need to be urged to protect their children against the kinds of repeated exposures that heavy play with violent video games or immersion in violent TV programs is likely to produce. One example of what can happen is Isabelle Martin. She grew up in a rough neighborhood, and had only her mom to raise her. She grew up around countless acts of violence in her neighborhood. She never had a steady job, and was always socializing with the wrong crowd of people. She began to do drugs and her life became and downward spiral. Therefore, parents should consider the district around them. Children are easily i...

... middle of paper ...

...rom? How can it be Managed?." Nscu.edu. North Carolina Cooperative Extension Service, 30 May 2000. Web. 10 Jan 2013. . (DeBord)

Nagle , J.(2009) Violence in movies, music, and the media. 1st Edition . Rosen: The Rosen PublishingGroup Inc, 63.

American Academy of Pediatrics. “Policy Statement—Media Violence,” Pediatrics (Nov. 2009): Vol. 124, No. 5, pp. 1495–503.

www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&dopt=Citation&list_uids=19841118

Gardner, Dan.(2007) "Scary anecdotes don't tell the real story on gun violence." : 1. Web. 8 Mar. 2013.

.

Hogan MJ.(2005) Jun Adolescents and media violence: six crucial issues for

practitioners. Adolesc Med Clin.16(2):249-68, vii. PubMed PMID:

16111617.

Open Document