Hypothesis
"Due to the increase in tablet and smartphone ownership, it is a causations of the increase in cyber bullying"
"The increase in media use in and the accessibility causes parents to have concerns about there being no regulations"
Monday, 4 December 2017
Exam question 3
The topic at hand has a great impact on the television which
is shown from my research, children are more likely to use newer media devices
instead of old devices such as Television or radio. This has increased the
likeliness of them owning a media device, most commonly a tablet or smartphone.
The fact that children’s access to these devices have increased for children
between the ages 5-15 they are using the devices to access media such as
YouTube and Netflix and social media. According to my primary research I had
asked parents questions about their children’s media uses and how they prefer
to use their devices. One of my questions were ‘Does your child prefer YouTube
or Television’ and the statistics from parents who answered showed that 76% of
children chose YouTube over television and means that children aren’t watching
television as much as previous years. YouTube allows the viewer to view any
content they desire at any time, unlike television which has a set schedule of
shows. This is slowly becoming the television for the younger generation
because they are watching others and uploading their own content and it is
becoming the common platform for entertainment for children, which is losing
viewers and money for the television sector, the evidence for this is from the BARB website which shows viewers have been decreasing over the last three years.
In addition to the problem affecting television is that TV shows are being watched on illegal streaming sites and they are also available on YouTube and there is no regulations on YouTube to prevent children watching content which is not suitable for their age. This is proven to be affecting the Television sector, according to my research on the BARB website it shows that since 2015 the audience viewing percentage has been decreasing, even in the months which would most commonly be the period that children would watch it most. In may the viewing has decreased by a total of 1.17%, in august they have dropped 1.4% and in January by 0.69%. From conducting a focus group, I had concluded the primary reasons why children prefer YouTube over Television, they can be split into to two categories accessibility and entertainment. The children which preferred it for accessibility reasons said they can access it in their rooms or can watch it anytime and do not need to wait for a scheduled show. From looking at the most recent
The Ofcom 2016 article suggest that the YouTube has become popular with children of all ages, mainly older child. 37% of 3-4 year olds and 87% 12-15 year olds using the YouTube website or application, this could suggest the causation of television becoming less popular for children. Parents from my survey say that they prefer YouTube over Television, this could also be the reason for parents concerns for online safety to increase, because within YouTube there are no regulations to protect the child unlike television which has the watershed. If the child is seeing innaproriate content and violence they could assume the world is full of negative and bad people, this is linked to cultivation theory which is also called bad world syndrome.
In addition to the problem affecting television is that TV shows are being watched on illegal streaming sites and they are also available on YouTube and there is no regulations on YouTube to prevent children watching content which is not suitable for their age. This is proven to be affecting the Television sector, according to my research on the BARB website it shows that since 2015 the audience viewing percentage has been decreasing, even in the months which would most commonly be the period that children would watch it most. In may the viewing has decreased by a total of 1.17%, in august they have dropped 1.4% and in January by 0.69%. From conducting a focus group, I had concluded the primary reasons why children prefer YouTube over Television, they can be split into to two categories accessibility and entertainment. The children which preferred it for accessibility reasons said they can access it in their rooms or can watch it anytime and do not need to wait for a scheduled show. From looking at the most recent
The Ofcom 2016 article suggest that the YouTube has become popular with children of all ages, mainly older child. 37% of 3-4 year olds and 87% 12-15 year olds using the YouTube website or application, this could suggest the causation of television becoming less popular for children. Parents from my survey say that they prefer YouTube over Television, this could also be the reason for parents concerns for online safety to increase, because within YouTube there are no regulations to protect the child unlike television which has the watershed. If the child is seeing innaproriate content and violence they could assume the world is full of negative and bad people, this is linked to cultivation theory which is also called bad world syndrome.
Ofcom Alternartive
Childhood 2016 Major shift in UK
children’s behaviour as time online overtakes time watching TV for first time
ever, reveals new report. This year has seen a major shift in UK children’s
media use with time spent online overtaking TV viewing for the first time ever1,
according to the latest 2016 CHILDWISE Monitor Report.
Tablet ownership also soared this
year – up by 50% from last year. Just six years after the UK release of the
iPad, tablets have swept into children’s lives, with two in three (67%) now
having their own device.
The new data shows that YouTube
has taken centre stage in children’s lives this year to become the place they
turn to for entertainment, music, games, TV programmes, instruction and advice.
Half use the site every day, almost all do so on occasion.
The majority of children who use
YouTube visit the site to access music videos (58%). Around half of users keep
themselves entertained with funny content on YouTube (52%). Around a third
watch gaming content, vlogs/blogs, TV programmes or ‘how to’ videos.
Children are also going online more in their
bedrooms. Three in four children (73%) can now access the internet in their
room, up from two in three (63%) last year.
The 2016 CHILDWISE Monitor is a
comprehensive annual report looking at five to 16-year-olds media consumption,
purchasing and social habits as well as key behaviour. More than 2000 children
in schools across the United Kingdom completed in-depth online surveys for the
report.
“Growing access to the internet
at any time and in any place, and a blurring of television content across
channels and devices, brings a landmark change in behaviour this year. TV
viewing has been redefined,” says Simon Leggett, Research Director from
CHILDWISE. “
Children are now seeking out the
content of their choice. They still find traditional TV programmes engaging but
are increasingly watching them online and on-demand or binge watching box
sets.”
This year, for the first time,
tablet devices have overtaken laptops/PCs/netbooks as the main type of computer
that children have in their homes. Four in five children (79%) now live in a
house with a tablet device in it. This is a significant rise from just three in
five (61%) last year.
A new mental health section in
CHILDWISE Monitor 2016 reveals most children are happy but there is a small
number for whom this is not the case. By age 11-16 one in 10 boys and one in
six girls are not happy and feel life is worse than it was a year ago.
• Zoella was the top vlogger, especially among
girls with 15% naming her as their favourite. Her appeal is highest among 11-12
year olds. Minecraft vlogger TheDiamondMinecart, younger brother of Zoella Joe
Sugg, gaming vlogger KSI and further Minecraft vlogger Stampy were the next
most popular.
• Little Mix top the chart this
year as the most popular artist, with 5% choosing them up from 1% last year.
One Direction fall to third most popular after three years of being children’s
top pick. • 63% of children own their own mobile phone with an average monthly
spend of £12.
• A further fall in book reading
for pleasure with the majority (53%) reading for half an hour or less per day.
8% of children read magazines every day compared to 11% last year.
• Children’s total spending power
in the UK is £7.5 million per year. Regular pocket money continues to fall and
children are increasingly likely to receive ad hoc handouts
Research Catalogue
Research Catalogue
Source 1: BBC November 2017
This is a website article created by a technology reporter which
allowed me to link together with my primary research. This is a useful source
because it showed me how much time the children spend online; this can be
linked with parental concerns with children’s media use.
Source 2: The Guardian November 2017
This is one of my most relevant and useful information
because it relates with all of my research and gives me a building points for a
hypothesis.
Source 3: BARB November 2017
The website BARB also known as Broadcasting Audience
Research Board, they are responsible with gathering statistics about audience consumption
patterns. This is useful because my chosen sector is television and this shows
the audiences viewing patterns and what they enjoy it also shows multiple time
points.
Source 4: Child wise December 2017
This was a report created by child wise who are a reliable source
of information because their job is to find statistics about children and how
they spend their time. This is a useful alternative for Ofcom 2016 report because
it has relevant information that can be linked with my primary and other
secondary.
Source 5: Focus Group November 2017
My first primary research method was useful because it was
an extension from my survey and asked children directly about their uses, but
not only were they asked what devices they use they were also asked why to get
the qualitative information.
Source 6: Survey November 2017
This is my final primary research method, this was a survey
asked to parents of children aged 5-15, this showed what children prefer and
what media devices they watch television. It also allowed me to make links with
my secondary to create a hypothesis.
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