• Parental instruction instrumental for ch

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Wed Aug 26 21:31:26 2020
    Parental instruction instrumental for children to learn how to safely
    cross busy roads
    Iowa researchers report parents who regularly use road crossings as
    teachable moments help youngsters learn the skill more readily

    Date:
    August 26, 2020
    Source:
    University of Iowa
    Summary:
    New research shows parents who teach children ahead of time how to
    properly choose gaps in traffic can help them learn more quickly how
    to cross roads safely. The study found that timely instruction from
    parents led to improvements in children's road-crossing abilities.



    FULL STORY ========================================================================== Learning to cross a busy street is anything but easy for a child,
    especially in places where the traffic doesn't stop.


    ========================================================================== Children must first identify a safe gap in traffic, use refined motor
    skills to precisely step off a curb the moment a car passes, and safely
    reach the other side of the street before the next vehicle arrives.

    The good news: Research says parents can help their children -- a lot.

    A new study from the University of Iowa reports that parents who
    use road crossings as teachable moments help their youngsters learn road-crossing skills faster and become better at crossing streets. The researchers learned this by watching sets of parent-child duos -- with
    the children varying in age from 6 to 12 years old -- cross a virtual
    road with continuous traffic.

    One finding: Children who received constructive advice from their parents
    - - especially the pointing out of safe gaps in traffic ahead of time -- learned best-practices in crossing more readily and crossed more safely.

    "This is something children need to learn how to do. It's an important,
    common, real-world skill," says Elizabeth O'Neal, a postdoctoral
    researcher in the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences at Iowa
    and the first author on the study. "Children learning ahead of time how to choose a sizable gap between vehicles leads to safer crossing outcomes. We found there's a lot that parents can do to help their children learn those skills and to keep their kids safe." By far, the safest way for a child
    to cross a road is at an intersection with a walk sign, a stoplight, or
    with marked crosswalks. But vehicles may not stop, even at crosswalks,
    and there are many roads where no crossing markings exist.



    ==========================================================================
    This puts children at risk. In 2018 alone, 175,000 youngsters between the
    ages of 1 and 14 were injured as pedestrians, according to the National
    Center for Injury Prevention and Control, a branch of the federal Centers
    for Disease Control and Prevention.

    The Iowa researchers wanted to understand whether parents could help
    their children cross roads more safely, as well as study how the parents offered help. In multiple rounds, 64 parents with a child aged 6, 8,
    10, or 12 crossed a virtual, single-lane road with a line of oncoming
    vehicles traveling at 25 miles per hour. The participating pairs were instructed to watch the traffic and then decide together when to cross.

    The main results: Across all ages, parents proactively pointed out
    safe traffic gaps in just 30% of the crossing exercises. In the other instances, parents simply instructed their children to cross (such as
    saying, "Let's go!") or began crossing without saying anything.

    When parents gave helpful instruction, their children showed a 10%
    improvement in how quickly they entered the road after the first car
    passed and a 7% gain in the margin of time between when they reached the
    other side of the road before the next car arrived. The researchers say
    those seemingly small gains in motor timing substantively increase the
    chances of a successful crossing.

    So, what is helpful instruction? Jodie Plumert, professor in the UI
    Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences and a co-author on the
    study, explains: "When you're crossing roads with your child, don't
    just say, 'Let's go!' when you want to go. Help the child look at the
    oncoming traffic and pick out ahead of time which gap you're going to
    choose. It helps the child learn how to pick the gap ahead of time and
    to correctly time when to cross."


    ==========================================================================
    The findings add to previous results by researchers in the UI's Hank
    Virtual Environments Lab (led by Plumert and Joseph Kearney, professor in
    the Department of Computer Science at Iowa) showing that most children
    don't fully grasp how to identify gaps in traffic and correctly time
    their road crossings until age 14. That study appeared in April 2017 in
    the Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, published by the American Psychological Association.

    A few previous studies have looked at how children cross roads and then interviewed their parents afterward. According to the Iowa researchers, it
    was clear from those studies that on the whole, parents weren't actively helping their children learn how to safely negotiate road crossings.

    Plumert says the most recent study is the first to examine how parents
    can help children learn to prospectively control their movements, and
    to understand what is needed mentally and physically to cross safely.

    "If this was something that parents were doing most of the time, then
    that would be great," Plumert says. "But our study shows that parents
    aren't using effective strategies to help their child learn about safe
    road crossings all that often. But the times the parents do have useful instructions, it's really helpful to the child. They just show much better performance crossing roads." The U.S. National Science Foundation and
    the U.S. Department of Transportation funded the research.


    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by University_of_Iowa. Original written
    by Richard C. Lewis.

    Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


    ==========================================================================


    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/08/200826083027.htm

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