The survey was carried out on more than a 1,000 parents who had children aged 10-15 and it was carried out as part of the insurance provider Aviva's to look at the impact of technology on family lives.
This has been reported in dailymail.co.uk dated 30 January 2017.
Their parents' generation had to wait much longer for their first phones because the mobile phones were not widely available or affordable in their childhood. Those in the age group 35-44 got their first phone at age 20 on an average, while those in the age group 45-54 ot theirs when they were around 29 years old.
Majority of the parents surveyed said that they gave their children their first phone for safety reasons.
Others said they gave their child a phone because all of their friends were getting them, and one in five bought the device 'to keep them entertained'. Seven per cent admitted that they gave their children phones so they could play games.
Image courtesy wikimediacommons.org
Mars mission very much on the cards - six scientists are getting ready in Hawaii
Remembering Princess Diana on her 20th death anniversary
Restaurant offering only organic food opens in Jubilee Hills, Hyderabad
Didi to UP on a selling mission (satire)
Ronald Grump invites Moody to Las Vegas (satire)
In the wonderland of deo sprays, fairness creams, and condoms
Sets of the film Padmavati in Jaipur vandalised, Bhansali cancels shooting
Indian born actress Priyanka Bose talks about the movie 'Lion'
Pakistan government lifts the ban on Indian films with 'Raees' and 'Kaabil'
Fire in a mosque in Texas - the Islamic Center of Victoria badly damaged
ISIS had plans to launch chemical warfare - evidence unearthed in Mosul
26-year-old man mows down four people and injures another 25 in Melbourne CBD
No comments:
Post a Comment