Nearly 24 Percent of Parents Are Buying Tablets for Their PreschoolersIs it possible to be too young for tech?

ByPCMag Staff

This story originally appeared onPCMag

am2photo | Getty Images

When I was in fifth grade, the tech bug bit -- my tweenage cohorts and I grew desperate for phones (back when they still flipped). Some got lucky; others, not so much. Regardless of how we fared, we all agreed: No one younger than us should have a phone.

Our logic was two-fold. In part, we were wiser, kinder, and more mature than those fourth-grade philistines. And of course, we genuinely couldn't fathom what a toddler would do with one.

But that was a decade ago (yes, it weirds me out too), and the tech landscape has changed dramatically --iPhonesbecame ubiquitous,laptopsbecame essential andtabletssimply became. As parents equipped themselves with fancy devices, their kids benefitted. Want to shut up your screeching three-year-old? Hand them an iPad and load up a (hopefully notedited) Peppa Pig video. Simple.

Now you'll walk down the street or through a store and see a half-dozen stroller-confined children with their chubby fingers clutching daddy'siPhone XS.

PCMag (via Google Surveys) polled 1,000 parents with children ranging from preschool to college age on what tech they're buying for their kids. An unsurprising 40 percent of parents with college-bound kids were buying them laptops, and 34 percent of high schoolers could soon benefit from a new computer. About 23 percent of middle school and 18 percent of elementary school attendees will have aFortniteandMinecraftmachine waiting at home, and 20 percent of preschoolers -- meaning kids age under 5 -- will receive computers. What they'll do with them, I have no idea. Spreadsheets, maybe?

But I can guess why so many kids in that age range will end up with tablets -- almost 50 percent of parents intend to buy tablets for their preschool and elementary school children, at 24 and 25 percent, respectively. Though they can be expensive, tablets are large and give kids a tactile experience that's harder to find on smaller devices. They're the besttech toyyou could ask for: Colors pop, games abound, and parents can easilylimit screen time.

We may bristle at seeing tots with tech, but for the upcoming generation, phone and computer literacy is as important as actual literacy. Introducing children to modern devices early will benefit them later, even if it unsettles those of us who didn't pop out of the womb with an iPhone in hand.

But if their Subway Surfers addictions start ruining lives, usethese tipsto keep your kid's tech use in check.

Related Topics

Business News

Microsoft's Salary Guidelines Were Leaked — Here's How Much New Employees Make

The data shows what salary looks like for new job offers.

Growing a Business

Is Your Family Business Giving Women the Short End of the Stick? Here's How to Recognize and Combat Discrimination.

The last place women might expect to experience discrimination is within their family business. But research shows it's a significant problem. Here's how to recognize and combat it in your business.

Business News

“好让你更多的钱”:马克古巴这样说Is the Major Mistake New Entrepreneurs Often Make

The billionaire appeared on "Good Morning America" this week.

Thought Leaders

Beware The Customer Cliff of Dissatisfaction — or Prepare to Lose Customers Fast

The Cliff of Dissatisfaction in customer service and the customer experience is the precipice where your customers (or prospective customers) lose faith that you can serve them in a timely manner. Here's how to identify it and fix this problem wherever it may occur.

领导

Ready to Take the Leap? Aerin Lauder Shares Advice for Aspiring Entrepreneurs.

Discover the entrepreneurial spirit that runs in the Lauder family as Aerin Lauder shares her grandmother's invaluable lessons and other success tips she's picked up during her career.

Business News

Get Babbel For Just $150 For Life Through October 23

Babbel Language Learning is just $149.97 (reg. $599.)