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The preschool years, roughly defined as 2 to 6 years old, are unique in the development of children's interaction with media. As children mature, their access to and use of the media, as well as their content preferences and tastes, change dramatically. The underlying assumption of the various psychological approaches that center on the interaction of the individual child with the media is that, with experience, children's cognitive, emotional, and social skills develop over time. Stage theories assume that human development proceeds through universal chronological stages. Accordingly, they suggest that the preschool years are a unique stage of development with its own special behavioral and cognitive characteristics termed preoperational by the Swiss psychologist Jean Piaget.

The pre-operational stage is characterized mainly by the acquisition of language. This allows representative thought, expanding the youngster's experiences beyond the “here and now” of the senses and motor activities that characterize the earlier stage of development. Thus, the child is able to think and talk about television experiences outside of the viewing situation. However, at this stage, the child is unable to perform many of the more advanced mental activities typical of older children at the next stage—concrete operations.

Media Use

Preschoolers apply their developing cognitive skills to the media as to any other aspect of their lives. Such capabilities determine in large degree what they use and attend to as well as the kind of meaning they make of these experiences. Indeed, recent studies that explored young children's exposure to media reveal that use of all media increases when children move into preschool years: viewing television and videos/ DVD levels off around 3 to 4 years old and then declines before peaking later in mid-childhood, whereas reading and computer use, which require special skills, continue to increase linearly until entering school. Interestingly, income is not related to most American children's amount of media use. This suggests that the infiltration of media in young children's life has become a universal phenomenon in developed societies.

Similarly, there are no significant gender differences in media use at this age, except for the use of video games, which are more popular among boys of all ages. Television and video/DVD viewing, reading, or computer use were found to be quite similar for both preschool boys and girls. However, viewing is related to parental education: Children of less educated parents watched more television. Higher parental education and income are also associated with having viewing rules for their children in regard to the amount of time and the kinds of programs viewed. Computer access, too, is related to families' socioeconomic status, as youngsters growing up in families with higher income and education are more likely to own a computer and to have Internet access.

Television remains the most central medium for this age group, if one includes all technologies and forms of transmission (i.e., broadcast, cable, satellite, videotapes, DVD). The growing body of research on preschoolers in the developed world has found great variability in the amount of viewing time at this age; however, 2 to 3 viewing hours a day are often reported. The variance depends, among other things, on the measure used (e.g., parental reports, observations, computerized rating measures). For example, children who live in homes where the television set is constantly on were found to spend more time viewing television and less time reading in comparison to children where the television was turned on only to view particular programs.

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