Alicia Blum-Ross reflects on ‘sharenting’ and blogging as increasingly accepted parts of parenthood, and the ramifications of such practices for children as they grow up. Alicia is a researcher at the LSE’s Department of Media and Communications. She is interested in youth media production and is part of the Parenting for a Digital Future research project
As we approach Christmas, many parents will be buying new digital products of one kind or another fo...
In this Digital Age, are we setting up our children to fail? Following the ‘helicopter parenting’ co...
Has ‘digital parenting’ simply become another dimension of parenting, as ‘traditional’ parenting spi...
With the holidays just around the corner, Alicia Blum-Ross speaks to Yalda T. Uhls about her new boo...
Alicia Blum-Ross takes a closer look at the infamous ‘BBC interview dad,’ and the representation of ...
Today marks the last day of the week of Hour of Code, an international programme to give children an...
Alicia Blum-Ross shares insights from the Parenting for a Digital Future project and how parents ass...
Do parents find the new digital age a frightening place to be? Sonia Livingstone considers recent me...
In this post, Stacey Steinberg explores her own personal conflicts around ‘sharenting’. Social media...
Alicia Blum-Ross discusses how the newly revised ‘screen time’ recommendations by the American Acade...
Benjamin Butterworth speaks out against the callous use of the phrase ‘That’s gay!” He argues that l...
Lelia Green takes a closer look at how parents’ attitudes to children’s digital media use change as ...
It used to be ‘Big Brother is watching you’, and we worried about CCTV, but today’s children are bei...
Tom Kirk and Kasper Hoffmann draw on the JSRP’s research to argue that calls to tackle the root caus...
Of course parents are often the most acute observers of emerging ‘digital’ practices in their famili...
As we approach Christmas, many parents will be buying new digital products of one kind or another fo...
In this Digital Age, are we setting up our children to fail? Following the ‘helicopter parenting’ co...
Has ‘digital parenting’ simply become another dimension of parenting, as ‘traditional’ parenting spi...
With the holidays just around the corner, Alicia Blum-Ross speaks to Yalda T. Uhls about her new boo...
Alicia Blum-Ross takes a closer look at the infamous ‘BBC interview dad,’ and the representation of ...
Today marks the last day of the week of Hour of Code, an international programme to give children an...
Alicia Blum-Ross shares insights from the Parenting for a Digital Future project and how parents ass...
Do parents find the new digital age a frightening place to be? Sonia Livingstone considers recent me...
In this post, Stacey Steinberg explores her own personal conflicts around ‘sharenting’. Social media...
Alicia Blum-Ross discusses how the newly revised ‘screen time’ recommendations by the American Acade...
Benjamin Butterworth speaks out against the callous use of the phrase ‘That’s gay!” He argues that l...
Lelia Green takes a closer look at how parents’ attitudes to children’s digital media use change as ...
It used to be ‘Big Brother is watching you’, and we worried about CCTV, but today’s children are bei...
Tom Kirk and Kasper Hoffmann draw on the JSRP’s research to argue that calls to tackle the root caus...
Of course parents are often the most acute observers of emerging ‘digital’ practices in their famili...
As we approach Christmas, many parents will be buying new digital products of one kind or another fo...
In this Digital Age, are we setting up our children to fail? Following the ‘helicopter parenting’ co...
Has ‘digital parenting’ simply become another dimension of parenting, as ‘traditional’ parenting spi...