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Junk
culture 'is
poisoning our
children'
By Ben Fenton
The Daily
Telegraph,
9/12/06
A sinister
cocktail of
junk food,
marketing,
over-competitive
schooling and
electronic
entertainment
is poisoning
childhood, a
powerful lobby
of academics
and children's
experts says
today.
Experts are
deeply
concerned at
the escalating
incidence of
childhood
depression
In a letter to
The Daily
Telegraph, 110
teachers,
psychologists,
children's
authors and
other experts
call on the
Government to
act to prevent
the death of
childhood.
They write:
"We are deeply
concerned at
the escalating
incidence of
childhood
depression and
children's
behavioural
and
developmental
conditions."
The group,
which includes
Philip
Pullman, the
children's
author,
Jacqueline
Wilson, the
children's
laureate, her
predecessor
Michael
Morpurgo,
Baroness
Greenfield,
the director
of the Royal
Institution
and Dr
Penelope
Leach, the
child care
expert, blames
a failure by
politicians
and public
alike to
understand how
children
develop.
"Since
children's
brains are
still
developing,
they cannot
adjust. . . to
the effects of
ever more
rapid
technological
and cultural
change," they
write.
"They still
need what
developing
human beings
have always
needed,
including real
food (as
opposed to
processed
"junk"), real
play (as
opposed to
sedentary,
screen-based
entertainment),
first-hand
experience of
the world they
live in and
regular
interaction
with the
real-life
significant
adults in
their lives.
"They also
need time. In
a fast-moving,
hyper-competitive
culture,
today's
children are
expected to
cope with an
ever-earlier
start to
formal
schoolwork and
an overly
academic
test-driven
primary
curriculum.
"They are
pushed by
market forces
to act and
dress like
mini-adults
and exposed
via the
electronic
media to
material which
would have
been
considered
unsuitable for
children even
in the very
recent past."
The letter was
circulated by
Sue Palmer, a
former head
teacher and
author of
Toxic
Childhood, and
Dr Richard
House, senior
lecturer at
the Research
Centre for
Therapeutic
Education at
Roehampton
University.
Mrs Palmer
said: "I have
been thinking
about this for
a long time
and I just
decided
something had
to be done.
"It is like
this giant
elephant in
all our living
rooms, the
fact that
children's
development is
being
drastically
affected by
the kind of
world they are
brought up
in."
She cited
research by
Prof Michael
Shayer at
King's
College,
London, which
showed that
11-year-olds
measured in
cognitive
tests were "on
average
between two
and three
years behind
where they
were 15 years
ago".
"I think that
is shocking.
We must make a
public
statement – a
child's
physical and
psychological
growth cannot
be
accelerated.
"It changes in
biological
time, not at
electrical
speed.
Childhood is
not a race."
The other
signatories
include Sir
Jonathon
Porritt, the
environmental
campaigner,
Prof Tim
Brighouse, the
Commissioner
for London
Schools and
Sir Richard
Bowlby, the
President of
the Centre for
Child Mental
Health.
Mr Morpurgo
said: "We have
so much
anxiety about
children,
their
protection,
their care,
their
education,
that this has
developed into
fear. There is
a fear around
children, both
from schools
and
politicians,
which has led
to this
target-driven
education
system.
"That has put
children into
an academic
straitjacket
from a very
early age
which
restricts
creativity and
the enrichment
of childhood."
He condemned
the "virtual
play"
represented by
electronic
games and
internet
surfing.
"That is where
children are
getting their
ideas from and
I find it
quite "toxic"
and pretty
scary for the
future."
Jacqueline
Wilson said:
"We are not
valuing
childhood. I
speak to
children at
book signings
and they ask
me how I go
through the
process of
writing and I
say, 'Oh you
know, it's
just like when
you play
imaginary
games and you
simply write
it all down'.
"All I get is
blank faces. I
don't think
children use
their
imaginations
any more."
Baroness
Greenfield is
so concerned
about the
effect of
technology on
children she
has set up an
all-party
group in the
Lords to look
into it.
The other
members are
three former
education
secretaries,
Baroness
Williams,
Baroness
Shephard and
Baroness
Morris.
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