STEVE SMITH -- What’s Up
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For those who may not know, here is an element of our family’s
lifestyle in a nutshell: My wife and I have not watched television for
more than five years and our two kids have not watched television for
more than two. And, yes, this is my annual anti-TV rant, which always
occurs in mid-April, just prior to National no-TV Week, which begins this
year on April 23.
Two recent events have made my dislike of television that much more
intense and have fortified the mountain of evidence proving that TV is a
very bad influence on children.
The first came in January when the U.S. Surgeon General reported that
watching television promotes violent behavior in children. Even more
alarming was the finding that the violent behavior occurred regardless of
whether the programs the children watched were violent.
The second event is actually two, both of which occurred last month
just south in the San Diego area. The two high school shootings shocked
the nation for a millisecond, until most of the media realized that Wall
Street’s high-tech meltdown was a bigger story than campus safety.
After San Diego, we were told once again that our schools are safe,
that given the enormous number of children attending school, these
shootings were not even a half-blip on the violence radar. It’s the same
line the FAA trots out every time a plane crashes and we’re supposed to
understand that it’s more dangerous to drive to the supermarket than to
fly to Salt Lake City, which has issued 30,000 concealed weapons permits.
In another year, or even at another time of year, I’d be in lock step
with the statisticians, asking people to calm down while tossing out the
word “aberration” like so many plastic Easter eggs.
Except that I no longer agree with the spokes people, not after the
Surgeon General’s report, which was quite clear: Watching television
promotes violent behavior in children. There were no qualifiers in the
report, no use of “may” cause or “could” cause, just a direct link from
the evidence to the facts.
Of course, no one can prove that television caused the two people to
shoot up the San Diego high schools or any school, but we should not be
taking any chances with our children. In the light of such a strong
statement by the Surgeon General, we should take a second and look harder
at raising TV-free kids.
But we’re not taking enough precautions. Across the country, only
5,300 schools have a formal program to reduce or eliminate the influence
of television from the lives of students. Here in Newport-Mesa, the
district saw fit to establish a program to punish bullies but did nothing
to stop what very well may be one of bullying’s major causes. We have no
formal TV reduction program in our district.
There’s another reason to get kids to turn off the tube. It is a fact
that when kids turn off the TV they start reading; reading is the No. 1
activity that replaces television viewing, followed by playing with
friends.
At our local schools, we spend lots of time and money promoting “Just
Read,” which is a very fine program, but it would be much more effective
if we also ran a concurrent program to encourage families to turn off the
TV.
Last year, the school board passed a resolution endorsing National
No-TV Week. This year, they did not.
Our schools need a no-TV policy. The reason why more schools don’t
adopt one was made clear by Bill Habermehl, the new superintendent of the
Orange County Department of Education, who told me: “I think it’s because
[schools] have so many things on their plate right now and they hope it’s
more of a program that parents embrace. I don’t think you’ll find an
educator in Orange County who won’t say, ‘It’s a wonderful idea, we
support it,’ but they just don’t have the time or energy to jump on one
more bandwagon. And we could do a lot of stuff but if the parent at home
still watches television, that’s where the model is.”
Habermehl nailed it. In order to get kids to watch less TV, parents
have to watch less TV and, sadly, many of them are just not ready to make
that sacrifice.
So as the serious school violence moves across the country from
Jonesboro, Ark. to Columbine and closer to us, we have the means at our
disposal to reduce the likelihood of violent behavior by our children,
according to the Surgeon General.
But this year, it will be business as usual.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer. Readers
may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at (949) 642-6086.
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