You are currently viewing Half of 10-year-olds in UK own a smartphone
A graph detailing the findings

By Zoe Kleinman

Fifty per cent of the United Kingdom’s (UK) 10-year-olds owned a smartphone in 2019, according to a report by media regulator, Ofcom.

The number of young phone owners doubled between the ages of nine and 10, which Ofcom dubbed “the age of digital independence”. In addition, 24% of three and four-year-olds had their own tablets, and 15% of them were allowed to take it to bed.

Ofcom’s annual report looks at the media habits of children, and the types of devices they are using. The 2019 study was based on more than 3,200 interviews with children and parents around the UK. “The mobile phone is the device of choice for children,” said Yih-Choung Teh, strategy and research group director at Ofcom. “I’m conscious that for these children who have never known a world without the internet, in many respects their online and offline worlds are indistinguishable.”

The report also found that older children were using social media to express their support for social causes and organizations, with 18% having shared or commented on a post, and one in ten having signed an online petition. Ofcom dubbed this “the Greta effect” after the 17-year-old environmental campaigner Greta Thunberg.

Other key findings for 2019 included:

  • 48% of girls aged 5-15 played online games, compared with 71% of boys. Boys spent twice as long playing, clocking up 14.5 hours per week, compared with 7.5 for girls.
  • Snapchat and Facebook remained the most popular social media platforms of older children, but 62% were also using WhatsApp (up from 43% in 2018).
  • 99% of children aged 5-15 used a TV set, 27% used a smart speaker and 22% used a radio.
  • 80% of the children in the report watched video-on-demand, and 25% watched no live broadcast TV at all. One nine-year-old girl told researchers: “I don’t really like the TV because you can’t pick what channels are on it”.

Ofcom also interviewed parents about their concerns. It found that 45% of parents thought the benefits of children using the internet outweighed the risks, but there was an overall increase in parental concern about young people seeing content that might lead them to self-harm.

Just under half (47%) of the parents spoken to were worried about pressure to spend money within games, especially on loot boxes, where the reward is not clear before purchase. Of those parents with children aged between 5 and 15, 87% had sought advice about how to keep them safe online.

“We are seeing around half of 12-15 year olds saying they have seen hateful content online, and an increase in parents who are concerned about it,” said Yih-Choung Teh. “The good news is, more conversations about staying safe online are also happening across the country.”

Following the report, children’s charity the NSPCC called for independent regulators to force social media platforms to protect their users from viewing harmful material. “While it’s encouraging that parents are talking to their children about their media use, we must look to tech giants to protect their users and ensure they are a force for good not bad,” said Andy Burrows, head of child safety online policy.

Source: BBC

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Ayuure Atafori
Author: Ayuure Atafori

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