Insight by Parenting
Replacing a play-based childhood with a phone-based childhood disrupts normal development because intensive phone use during the sensitive, slow-play period deprives children of elder-led cultural learning and free social play needed to wire social, emotional, and cognitive skills.
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Infants learn phonetic statistics only from live social interaction because social presence triggers attention and engagement that gates their sampling and encoding of speech, while passive audio or video fails to evoke the same learning state.