At what age TV for toddler?

Anonymous
We have a 2.5 year old. I am ok with letting him watch some cartoons for 15 mins on Sat and Sun.

Husband thinks we should not let him watch anything until 5-6.

Thoughts?
Anonymous
I was like your husband and now I let my child (3 yo) watch 30mins-1h per day in these winter days. She’s an only and goes to school only 2 mornings a week. I quickly run out of things to do with her.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I was like your husband and now I let my child (3 yo) watch 30mins-1h per day in these winter days. She’s an only and goes to school only 2 mornings a week. I quickly run out of things to do with her.


Thanks! I think in our case we would only do 15 mins on Sat and then 15 mins on Sun. During the week, he goes to daycare full-time.

I used to watch 30mins-1 hour as a child and it was fine.

I feel like 15 mins twice a week should be completely fine but my husband thinks it's very bad for teh kind.

To me that sounds too extreme
Anonymous
PP here - let this be daddy time then
Anonymous
TV is not harmful to children. What is harmful is replacing actual human interaction with TV. Obviously, 15 minutes a day does not mean you aren't interacting with your child.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:TV is not harmful to children. What is harmful is replacing actual human interaction with TV. Obviously, 15 minutes a day does not mean you aren't interacting with your child.


+1 I don’t do any screens because it doesn’t suit me the parent (I don’t watch TV myself and policing fingers off the keyboard of my computer is too much work) but I definitely don’t think they harm kids unless they’re being used in place of a substantial amount of human interaction.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:TV is not harmful to children. What is harmful is replacing actual human interaction with TV. Obviously, 15 minutes a day does not mean you aren't interacting with your child.


This. There's nothing inherently wrong with tv. My kids watch a lot of tv but also get a lot of reading, exercise, music, outdoor etc time. Everything in moderation.
Anonymous
15 min? That’s not even an episode of Sesame Street
Anonymous
15 mins? Go for 1 hour. You’ll thank me later.
Anonymous
We didn't allow any screens for fun until 7th grade. After age 4, they were allowed tv when sick or on a long (2+ hrs) flight.

*Exceptions to "no screens" have always been FaceTiming with relatives and school assignments.

But as babies/toddlers/young preschoolers? No tv.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:We didn't allow any screens for fun until 7th grade. After age 4, they were allowed tv when sick or on a long (2+ hrs) flight.

*Exceptions to "no screens" have always been FaceTiming with relatives and school assignments.

But as babies/toddlers/young preschoolers? No tv.


7th grade?! Wow you are hard core.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:We didn't allow any screens for fun until 7th grade. After age 4, they were allowed tv when sick or on a long (2+ hrs) flight.

*Exceptions to "no screens" have always been FaceTiming with relatives and school assignments.

But as babies/toddlers/young preschoolers? No tv.



how long has facetime existed?
Anonymous
I wanted to wait til 2 for my first but pandemic hit when she was 18 mos and that ended that.

With my second, he is 20 months and has not done tv yet. We do my older kid’s tv time when the younger one naps. So I think we will just wait til he’s done napping.
Anonymous
I think up to a half hour is fine. Waiting until 5 or 6 sounds crazy. There's plenty of educational tv shows children can learn from. If you're worried stick to PBS kids.
Anonymous
If your husband doesn’t want him watching TV and is willing to play with him instead, why not defer to his wishes and not turn on the TV? I don’t see the gain in 15 minutes of cartoon versus not. We let our 3 year old watch the news or a sports game with us if it’s on but she doesn’t watch cartoons yet.
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