The following information was recently passed to me so I'm passing it along to my readers!
New Free Media Diet Calculator Planned to Launch Dec. 26
Aims to Bring Awareness of Family Media Intake Versus Real Life Interaction 
Nashville,  Tenn. Dec. 15, 2010… After a season filled with record-setting cell  phone and gaming gifts to teens and tweens, iShine is announcing the  upcoming Dec. 26 release of the Family Media Diet Calculator.  The  calculator is a new tool providing customized awareness to families in  regards to how much time they spend connected to media in comparison to  the amount of hours they spend plugged in with real life interaction and  content consumption. 
By  visiting http://www.familymediadiet.com, parents nationwide will be  able to plug in amounts of time their families spend texting, browsing  online, consuming television and more. They will then be able to print a  free custom analysis of where their families are spending their time in  comparison to their involvement in recreational and faith-based  activities along with family time and reading.  The campaign is not an  anti-technology movement.  It is about use awareness and being  intentional about the content.
It  is estimated that the 20 million tweens in this country spend 25 hours a  week watching television and playing video games and only one hour in  church.  George Barna (The Barna Group), a pioneer in research on  Christian culture, recently noted that kids spend more time absorbing  media than anything else in their lives, except sleeping. A recent  article in The New York Times titled “Growing Up Digital, Wired for  Distraction” also discussed the effects of technology compared to focusing and  learning.
“We as parents must  be deliberate of what media our kids consume, understanding that it is  forming the way our kids look at everything – self image, friends,  parents, leaders, themselves,” remarks iShine Founder and Chief Creative Officer Robert Beeson. “If we as parents aren’t actively forming the person our kid’s are becoming – make no mistake – someone else is.” 
 

 


 
 







 
 



 
 

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