Bounty.com homepage
Bounty Home
Bounty Community
Planning Your Pregnancy
Baby On Board (Pregnancy)
New Arrivals
Toddler Years
Growing Families
Me Time
Bounty tv
My Photos
Bounty Club
Guides
Coupons
Toddler features
Toddler podcasts
Recipes
Bounty Directory
Fun with
Huggies
Nutrition
Save
for free
Photo
Gifts
My Bounty
Blogs
Forums
Chat
Games
Go
Oops! You don't appear to be logged in!
Log in
Sign up
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Our partners
Bounty feature
Toddlers and television
Bet you’d never believe you’d start getting your life back, but it’s happening! Here are some tips to help you keep things under control.
Control the remote
‘There are so many channels and programmes for kids now, but should I let my eight-month-old watch TV?’
Now you’re baby’s growing into a toddler, you’ll be aware of all the areas of their life that are the subject of keen debate – what they eat, how they sleep, how they play, and, one of the thorniest – should they watch TV.
TV is blamed for all kinds of social ills, from encouraging violence to making us fat and illiterate. There is evidence to show that too much TV can have a bad effect on children, but equally, that if it’s watched selectively, it can also be good fun.
‘Selectively’ is the magic word. TV is linked to problems in kids when it’s watched too much or when it’s on in the background all day.
Top TV tips for your toddler...
Be in charge of what they watch right from the start. Watch TV with them so you can talk about the programme together, then switch it off
Choose programmes made for their age group, those with lots of activity for them to copy and the repetition that they love at this age. The CBeebies channel is ideal
Don’t let them watch more than an hour a day (that will probably be as much as you can stand anyway!)
Don’t get into the habit of using the TV as a ‘babysitter’ while you catch up on the housework or make a phone call
They’ve never had it so good
There are now more than 20 TV channels just for kids. But those with programmes for the youngest tots, such as Teletubbies (CBeebies), Bear in the Big Blue House (Disney Channel) and Boobah (Nick Jr) haven’t been around that long, so there isn’t yet enough research to show what effect they might have on tiny minds What we do know is that La La, Tutter and Humbah and co’s baby talk and breezy songs don’t help little kids’ language development. But they don’t harm it either, so there’s no reason why they shouldn’t simply watch programmes like these for fun of it.
Balancing act
When they’re old enough to talk, these two little words often come before whatever fabulous toy or scrummy-looking snack they’ve just seen in a TV ad.
In the UK, there are strict rules for ads around children’s TV programmes, though a total ban on junk food advertising was ruled out last year. Many parents would be happy if the rules were more stringent, as in Greece where toy commercials are banned during the day.
Despite the worry about the pester-power effect of ads on impressionable youngsters, under-sevens don’t really recall the specific brands they see in TV commercials. But they do ask for more toys than children who don’t watch much commercial television.
So if you’d prefer your toddler’s first words not to be ‘I want’ then stick with CBeebies, or record other channel’s programmes so that they can watch at a time that suits you, and fast forward through the ads.
Most wanted
Discussion forums
Interactive pregnancy calendar
Gender Guesser
Baby names charts
Product Reviews
Advertisement
Latest news
Zoe Ball reveals baby hopes
Myleene: Having a baby is perfect
Charlotte turns to old wives' remedies to ...
Baby Beau tops 'an amazing year' for ...
Grey's Anatomy star reveals pregnancy
All news
Weekly poll
We hope you have lots of happy holiday memories, what was your favourite part of Christmas day?
Bucks Fizz Breakfast
Opening presents
Afternoon film
Queens Speech
Christmas dinner
Chocolate
Playing with new toys
Seeing my family’s excitement
Spending time as a family
Having someone else cooking dinner for a change!