The Screen Time of Teens and Tips to Limit It

screen time

Teens are spending more time on their phones and other digital screens every single day on average of 7h 22m and multi-screen media use upwards of 10h 45m. And now with COVID-19 going on, teens may view screen time as one way of coping with various difficult emotions. This article will help you understand just how much screen time teens engage in and tips to help your teen engage in more healthy activities.

Just How Much Time Are Teens Spending on Their Screens?

According to the latest report from Common Sense Media, an organization that studies the use of technology, tweens (children between the ages of 8-12) and teens (13-18) are spending excessive amounts of time on their screens. For example, teens spend an average of 7h 22m on their screens with tweens averaging in at 4h 44m.
You might be thinking: “Well, I don’t think that my teen is spending 7 hours on Snapchat!” And guess what?! Your parental instincts are right!
Teens aren’t just spending time on social media; instead, they’re multitasking. At the same time that they’re sending a snap, they’re also reading an e-book for their literature class at school and watching a YouTube video on the latest trend in gaming. So, this statistic does account for times when screens are being used in healthy ways.

Why You Should Care About Limiting Your Teens Screen Time

Limiting your teenagers from screens is important for a variety of reasons:

  • The use of social media apps is associated with higher rates of depression and anxiety among teens.
  • Excessive use of screens is associated with higher rates of loneliness amongst younger people. Mark Manson, a writer on mental health and relationships writes in his book Everything is F*cked that screens encourage users to avoid real relationships and connections.
  • Excessive use of screens, especially when associated with social media and images, can encourage teens to seek external validation while decreasing their ability to validate themselves internally.
  • Excessive use of screens is associated with obesity and is considered a factor in promoting obesity amongst younger age groups.


4 Tips to Engage Your Teen In Activities Outside the Screen

Here are some tips to help you engage your teen in activities outside of the screen.

1.Talk to your teen about the use of screens and the underlying patterns that emerge from their use of screens.

Talking to your teen about why they’re using screens can help you understand where they’re coming from. It can also help you understand how you can help them based on the patterns or themes that emerge. For example, the use of screens might be a teen’s way of coping with uncertainty. A teen may unconsciously feel like with COVID-19 constantly changing things around them, their online image is one thing that they can control. Likewise, another teen may feel that with constant statewide lockdowns, social media offers them a way to distract themselves while maintaining some level of control of things happening in their lives.

2. Model for your teen what it looks like to have a healthy relationship with screens.

If you’re spending hours emailing your coworkers rather than prioritizing family time or self-care, then your teen will follow suit by engaging in more screen time.

3. Encourage your teen to see screen-use as a privilege and not a right.

Have your teen earn screen time. This might be allowing one hour of social media use after a few hours of homework.

4. Create a consistent routine for your teen where values like family-time and self-care are prioritized.

In the book “Fostering Resilient Learners,” the therapist and researcher on childhood trauma and education Kristen Souers suggests that children of all ages value consistency and familiar routines. Offering your teenager time to focus on themselves and their physical and mental health (self-care) and their parents and siblings (family time) helps them understand that their relationship with themselves and others can also blossom outside of screens.

You Have More of An Influence Than You Think

In the end, you have more of an impact on your teen than you think. Encouraging things like self-care, family time and having your teen reflect on why they’re using social media are just some of the many ways that you can help your teen.

Request Free Admissions Information

Step 1 of 3 - Your Contact Info

Written by Natalie

30 Oct, 2020

Recent Posts

Tips for Parents Dealing With Reactive Attachment Disorder (RAD)

Reactive attachment disorder (RAD) can be a complicated situation for parents to navigate. This disorder results from a disruption to the all-important bonding process that should take place between children and parents in those early formative childhood years. To...

ADHD: A Parents Guide To Understanding Your Teen

Has your teen recently been diagnosed with ADHD? It could be that you’ve spent years with the wrong diagnosis, not getting your child the right type of therapy needed. ADHD can bring several complexities and challenges for parents and everyone in the family. Learning...

9 Ways Parents of Bipolar Teens Can Help

If your teen has been diagnosed with bipolar disorder, you may feel overwhelmed as you consider how you can help. Parenting a bipolar teen can be frustrating and stressful. You must take care of your own needs and avoid blaming yourself for the challenging behavior...

How to Help Your Violent Teen Manage Their Anger

No parent is truly ever prepared to see their teen erupt in violent behavior. Whether the angry behavior is being expressed at school or home, or both, it can lead to a world of confusion and questions for parents who now need to navigate life with a teen prone to...

5 Tips to Find the Right Therapeutic Boarding School

When your teen is struggling with behavioral problems or mental illness concerns, it’s essential to find the best resources to help them find their way back to stability. If you’ve decided to get your troubled teen into a therapeutic boarding school, you must select...

Why Eating Disorders Among Teens Are On The Rise

The pandemic has taken a toll on each of us. For teens, it has almost flipped their world upside down. From missing important sporting events to losing time with friends at parties and sleepovers, teens have struggled immensely. There has been a noticeable increase in...

What Screen Time is Doing To Teens

We live in an increasingly connected world, with an increasing reliance on gadgets in our lives. When was the last time that everyone in your family went a full day without looking at a screen? Screen time is unavoidable, it seems, even for our teens. They need their...

The Most Commonly Used Drugs by Teens

According to several studies conducted over the last decade, there have been declining numbers of teens using illicit drugs. That said, there are still many teens who experiment with, use, and abuse both drugs and alcohol. Their reasonings may vary, and the level of...

Why Are ADHD Rates Rising?

Have a conversation with other parents, and you’ll find that many of them will speak about their children and teens, and even themselves, having been diagnosed with ADHD. It can feel like there are increasing ADHD diagnoses being seen across ages and genders, leading...

You May Also Like…

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *