Over the years video games have been proven to increase addiction to staying inside, along with increased aggression, and various medical and psychosocial effects. However there are many positive aspects to playing video games. Research dating back to the early 1980s has consistently shown that playing computer games (of different genre) produces reductions in reaction times, improved hand-eye co-ordination and raises the player’s self-esteem. Let’s explore into some of these aspects and arguments to determine the ultimate decision on whether video games can help your education. Video games might consume the attention and time of your children, but it is important to remember that technology has and will forever have an impact on childhood as we progress further into scientific research.
Here are some things that video games can do well for your children’s health.
Video games can be used to research new things.
Video games can attract participation by individuals across many boundaries
Video games can assist your child in making/and completing goals.
Video games can be useful by measuring performance on a wide variety of tasks
That is some info on what video games can do well for your child, now let’s see explore the possibilities of bad things that can come from this.
Over-dependence on video games could foster social isolation, as they are often played alone.
Practicing violent acts may contribute more to aggressive behavior than watching TV
Many games only offer an arena of weapons, killings, kicking, stabbing and shooting.
Most game portray a “be the most violent” to win scheme.
After reading over all of those aspects and points made you are probably leading to think that they are going to do more damage to your child if you let them play video games rather than if you don’t. Sadly I cannot agree with you there and I am trying my best to make you believe that they can do more good than bad. If you