Parenting in the media fast lane: the impact of new and traditional media on Australian mothers of young children

At no time in history have Australian families had more media interaction and “screen time” (Screen Australia, 2011; Nielsen Online, 2008). This fact alone – the omnipresent nature of different media in Australian households – impacts parenting. This is a critical reflection on a formative study i...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Archer, Catherine, Wolf, Katharina
Other Authors: Kerry McCallum
Format: Conference Paper
Published: Australian and New Zealand Communication Association 2011
Online Access:http://www.anzca.net/documents/anzca-11-1/refereed-proceedings-3/476-archer-anzca-2011-1/file.html
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/61793
_version_ 1848760729012797440
author Archer, Catherine
Wolf, Katharina
author2 Kerry McCallum
author_facet Kerry McCallum
Archer, Catherine
Wolf, Katharina
author_sort Archer, Catherine
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description At no time in history have Australian families had more media interaction and “screen time” (Screen Australia, 2011; Nielsen Online, 2008). This fact alone – the omnipresent nature of different media in Australian households – impacts parenting. This is a critical reflection on a formative study into the use and impact of both new and traditional media on parenting. Motivated by an opportunity to present our insights to the State’s leading agency for parenting matters in 2010, the researchers invited a group of Australian mothers to share their insights, concerns and highlights concerning parenting advice and the perceived impact of the media on their parenting. In this paper we reflect critically on literature surrounding parenting and the media, and the outcomes of a focus group and a parenting in the media workshop before moving on to outline a proposed programme of study, focused on the role (particularly new) media plays in influencing mothers’ parenting. Findings indicate that parents – in this case, mothers – cannot avoid engaging with both new and traditional media. However, mothers use different information channels for different types of information. Mothers are time poor but also depend on the media, in particular the internet, for parenting information and support. These findings have implications for marketers, keen to engage with parents, but also for government departments, whose role it is to deliver accurate, factual and often life-saving information.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T10:20:24Z
format Conference Paper
id curtin-20.500.11937-61793
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T10:20:24Z
publishDate 2011
publisher Australian and New Zealand Communication Association
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-617932018-04-17T01:45:09Z Parenting in the media fast lane: the impact of new and traditional media on Australian mothers of young children Archer, Catherine Wolf, Katharina Kerry McCallum At no time in history have Australian families had more media interaction and “screen time” (Screen Australia, 2011; Nielsen Online, 2008). This fact alone – the omnipresent nature of different media in Australian households – impacts parenting. This is a critical reflection on a formative study into the use and impact of both new and traditional media on parenting. Motivated by an opportunity to present our insights to the State’s leading agency for parenting matters in 2010, the researchers invited a group of Australian mothers to share their insights, concerns and highlights concerning parenting advice and the perceived impact of the media on their parenting. In this paper we reflect critically on literature surrounding parenting and the media, and the outcomes of a focus group and a parenting in the media workshop before moving on to outline a proposed programme of study, focused on the role (particularly new) media plays in influencing mothers’ parenting. Findings indicate that parents – in this case, mothers – cannot avoid engaging with both new and traditional media. However, mothers use different information channels for different types of information. Mothers are time poor but also depend on the media, in particular the internet, for parenting information and support. These findings have implications for marketers, keen to engage with parents, but also for government departments, whose role it is to deliver accurate, factual and often life-saving information. 2011 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/61793 http://www.anzca.net/documents/anzca-11-1/refereed-proceedings-3/476-archer-anzca-2011-1/file.html http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/au Australian and New Zealand Communication Association fulltext
spellingShingle Archer, Catherine
Wolf, Katharina
Parenting in the media fast lane: the impact of new and traditional media on Australian mothers of young children
title Parenting in the media fast lane: the impact of new and traditional media on Australian mothers of young children
title_full Parenting in the media fast lane: the impact of new and traditional media on Australian mothers of young children
title_fullStr Parenting in the media fast lane: the impact of new and traditional media on Australian mothers of young children
title_full_unstemmed Parenting in the media fast lane: the impact of new and traditional media on Australian mothers of young children
title_short Parenting in the media fast lane: the impact of new and traditional media on Australian mothers of young children
title_sort parenting in the media fast lane: the impact of new and traditional media on australian mothers of young children
url http://www.anzca.net/documents/anzca-11-1/refereed-proceedings-3/476-archer-anzca-2011-1/file.html
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/61793