mom2princessj
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Sep 9, 2008
- Messages
- 559
They may well go too far but more than one parent has posted on this thread that the TV is on virtually all of the time with no restrictions which would also seem to me to be going way too far. If they're not watching then turn it off so that you can interact with them without distraction.
When my DS24 was a toddler, he watched Sesame Street and that was it- one hour per day. DD12, as a toddler, watched Barney so 30 minutes to an hour per day.
It's only too far in your opinion. If my kids had no interaction with me/dh I highly doubt my dd would be top of her preschool class with my 4 yo ds knowing just as much right behind her. Some people prefer to let their kids watch tv others don't...it's not anyone else's right to judge or say how excessive not excessive it is to let your kids watch it or not. Plenty of parents interact with the tv on as well as off. My kids and I loved to watch the programs together, sing the songs together, dance, etc. That's interacting just as much as when I'm turning off the tv to teach my dd to read or helping ds with his writing. To each their own...when its not my kid it really doesn't phase me what others do with their kids nor do I ever feel it is my business to tell people what they do with their kids is wrong, excessive, etc. Making insinuations like that only make it look like one's parenting style is better than anothers and we all KNOW that everyone needs to parent how they see fit for their own families and worry about themselves!
OP do WHAT you are comfortable with. NO doctor, expert, or other parent can tell YOU what is best for your child. If tv is interferring in their development, causing them to become behind in school, or if they'd rather sit on the couch than be active and then become overweight well then IN MY OPINION it may be time to look at addressing the hours the tv is on. But again that's my opinion for my kids!

I quoted the AAP, to provide the OP with what we could surely all agree is an expert opinion. They've actually studied the issue as opposed to parents giving an opinion on how TV viewing has effected individual children..
