Breakthrough Findings from the Children of the 2020s Cohort Study
A groundbreaking analysis from the Education Policy Institute (EPI) using data from the University College London (UCL)-led Children of the 2020s cohort study has illuminated screen time habits among nine-month-old infants in England. This nationally representative research, drawn from over 8,000 families surveyed in late 2022, reveals that 72% of these babies encounter at least some daily screen exposure, averaging 41 minutes per day across those affected. While the majority experience moderate use, a concerning 2% exceed three hours daily, prompting urgent discussions in UK higher education circles on early childhood development and digital influences.
The Children of the 2020s study, commissioned by the Department for Education (DfE) and spearheaded by UCL's Centre for Longitudinal Studies (CLS), tracks 8,500 babies born in England during the early 2020s. Longitudinal cohort studies like this—where the same group is followed over time—provide invaluable insights into long-term developmental trajectories. Researchers at UCL, including experts from the Department of Psychology and Language Sciences, employ rigorous parent-reported data collection, survey weights for representativeness, and advanced statistical models to control for variables such as age, gender, ethnicity, and socioeconomic factors. This wave focused on the first survey at around nine months, capturing baseline habits in a digital-saturated era.
Detailed Breakdown of Screen Time Exposure Patterns
Delving into the distribution, 28% of infants had no screen time whatsoever, 49% up to one hour, 16% up to two hours, 5% up to three hours, and 2% more than three hours. This granularity highlights that while ubiquitous, extreme exposure affects a small minority. The open-ended parental question—“Typically, how many minutes a day does [baby] watch television, videos, or other digital content on a screen?”—ensured precise reporting, analyzed via linear probability models and estimated means.
| Screen Time Category | Percentage of Infants |
|---|---|
| None | 28% |
| Up to 1 hour | 49% |
| Up to 2 hours | 16% |
| Up to 3 hours | 5% |
| Over 3 hours | 2% |
This table underscores the skewed nature toward lighter use, yet the prevalence raises flags for early years educators training at UK universities like UCL and the University of Birmingham, partners in the cohort.
Socioeconomic and Family Structure Influences
Unlike patterns at age two—where low-income families showed higher use—this infant data reveals nuanced demographics. Babies with no siblings faced screens 80% of the time (vs. 57% with four+ siblings), likely due to less interactive play opportunities. Single-parent households averaged 47 minutes vs. 39 in two-parent ones. Parental education displayed an 'n-shaped' curve: least among no qualifications or postgraduate levels. Income showed no link to any vs. none but inverse among users (36 min highest income vs. 42 min lowest).
- Siblings Effect: More siblings correlate with reduced screen reliance, possibly from shared caregiving.
- Family Structure: Single parents juggle more, turning to screens for settling.
- Education Gradient: Postgraduate parents minimize exposure, reflecting awareness from academic training.
These insights inform university programs in child psychology and social work, such as those at LSE, cited in prior EPI work.
Interplay with Enrichment Activities and Development
For the 2% heavy users (>3 hours), screens displace key activities: lower rates of book-looking, reading, outdoor trips, pretend play, turn-taking, and singing. Conversely, up to two hours shows neutral or positive links (e.g., more pretend play at 86% vs. 82% none). This suggests moderate, interactive use may complement development, a finding UCL researchers emphasize for nuanced policy.
Building on age-two data from the same cohort, where 98% of toddlers averaged two hours (double WHO limit) and high use tied to 53% vocabulary scores (vs. 65% low use), the trajectory worries early childhood experts. UCL's Dr. Laurel Fish and team highlight emotional/behavioral risks (39% high vs. 17% low).
Photo by Natã Alves Motta on Unsplash
Perspectives from Leading UK University Researchers
Dr. Tammy Campbell, EPI Director for early years (with ties to academic networks), urges shifting from 'how much' to 'what' and 'why': “Screen time and a healthy childhood are not mutually exclusive... policymaking should help families use digital tools to enhance development.” UCL's longitudinal expertise, spanning Millennium Cohort to this study, positions it as pivotal in evidencing these claims. For full details, see the EPI report.
Rachel de Souza, Children’s Commissioner, collaborates on DfE guidance, stressing context. University of Birmingham partners contribute to cohort analysis, enriching higher ed's role in public health.
Alignment with Global and National Guidelines
WHO advises no sedentary screen time under two, yet 72% exceed this. RCPCH echoes caution, linking excess to developmental delays. DfE's impending under-fives guidance, expert-led, promises non-judgmental advice amid 41-minute averages. UK universities like UCL train educators to bridge research-policy gaps.
Implications for Early Childhood Education in UK Universities
This research underscores the need for updated curricula in teacher training at institutions like UCL, Birmingham, and teacher colleges. Programs in early years education must integrate digital literacy, teaching interactive screen use (e.g., co-viewing apps for bonding). Longitudinal data informs evidence-based pedagogy, preparing graduates for diverse family dynamics. Case studies from Millennium Cohort show persistent patterns, urging proactive interventions.
- Enhanced modules on screen-context effects.
- Partnerships with DfE for guideline rollout.
- Research fellowships tracking cohort into school age.
Stakeholder Views and Broader Societal Impacts
Single parents cite practical needs; academics advocate support over stigma. High-use links to parental mental health (age-two data), highlighting holistic approaches. UK higher ed responds via child development research hubs, fostering multidisciplinary solutions.
Photo by Pedro Miguel Aires on Unsplash
Future Trajectories and Ongoing University Research
Future Children of the 2020s waves will track causality, content types (passive vs. interactive), and outcomes like vocabulary. UCL's CLS pioneers this, with DOI-accessible data: ONS Secure Research Service. Implications span neurodevelopment to policy, positioning UK unis as global leaders.
Actionable Insights for Parents, Educators, and Policymakers
Prioritize shared viewing; limit passive >3hrs. Universities offer resources via outreach. DfE guidance imminent. Explore UCL CLS for tools.
- Co-view educational content.
- Balance with play/singing.
- Seek uni-led workshops.
