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Kids
Fear Violence
The
makers of Sesame Street were trying to find out what makes elementary
school children tick when they had an unexpected discovery.
American
children ages 6 to 11 fret over guns, death, violence and the
environment according to a new study by the creators of Sesame
Street.
The Sesame
Workshop (formerly called the Children's Television Workshop)
conducted the study to get a handle on the educational and developmental
needs of children ages 6 to 11 and to come up with educational
media content for that age group.
In the pursuit
of ideas about learning programs, researchers tapped into a surprising
fear of violence in a majority of the kids interviewed.
The qualitative
study allowed 233 children of diverse ethnic backgrounds from
across the country to use cameras, art work, collages from newspapers
and magazines, and mini-essays to describe their lives
including their hopes and fears in workbooks.
Susan Royer,
the vice president of research strategy at Sesame Workshop, says
the kid's responses reveal that the "adult world" affects them
very deeply.
"We were surprised,
I think, at the presence of the adult world so much in the child's
world, kind of the sprawl of adulthood onto childhood," Royer
told ABCNEWS' Good Morning America.
"Certainly
that was evidenced in the kids' fears not just of death,
which might be considered normal at this age but really,
kind of the accompaniment of violence and more adult things as
it relates to those issues."
Kid
Fears
When asked
to state their fears, nearly two-thirds of the children vividly
depicted intense unsettling anxieties about guns, death and violence.
Among the 9-to-11-year-olds, the proportion indicating such fears
was three-fourths.
Asked what
they were afraid of, Eric Najera, for instance, depicted his fears
with a picture of a kidnapping.
"Lots of time,
I'm like scared," he said. "There's people
there's people
like gangsters, hanging around, marking their area."
Robby Janeczek
said he's worried about school shootings. To depict his fears,
he had a workbook with the letters RIP on it.
"I can picture
it happening at any school," he said. "I feel safe, but there's
still that one feeling that says that could happen. I don't want
to die at a young age. I wanna die happy and old."
Cherisse Olpin
said she feels safe in her parents' bed, tucked in tightly.
"No one can
get me," she says, adding that it is safe from bad people, "like
thieves or kidnappers."
No
More Playgrounds?
Though they
were not asked expressly about the environment, it surfaced as
a concern for many of the children who were part of the study.
Children ages
9 to 11 said they are worried about environmental problems that
could shrink their play areas and pollution. Nearly 65 percent
expressed concerns that outdoor places could be lost to development
or neglect.
Media looms
large in the lives of children, though its importance varied depending
on sex, the study showed.
Three-fourths
of all the 9-to-11-year-olds interviewed cited the media room
as the heart of their home, with 60 percent of boys saying the
TV was the main attraction. Girls, however, emphasized family
togetherness as the draw for the media room.
Almost half
of the boys said an electronic item such as a television or electronic
game were their prized possessions, while girls valued dolls and
toys.
When asked
about who they though of as heroes, magicians and wise ones in
their lives, children consistently picked their parents and family
members. Grandparents, aunts and uncles were also selected as
people who played valuable roles in their lives.
Reference
Source 104
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