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This company wants to encourage your child to learn through tech
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The tech company GoNoodle has a simple mission: help your child learn new things using mobile devices. - photo by Herb Scribner
The tech company GoNoodle has a simple mission: help your child learn new things using a mobile device.

As Forbes reported, the company designs mobile games, interactive tools and family friendly entertainment that look to improve your childrens life, offering them opportunities to embrace physical activity and learn about new subjects that can enhance their minds.

Choosing from hundreds of customized videos, teachers and parents use GoNoodle to effectively direct a childs energy, while breaking away from traditional methods of teaching to make the learning experience fun and entertaining, as opposed to exhausting or disinteresting, according to Forbes.

GoNoodle, which launched in 2013, spent close to six months testing out its games and apps. Now, they are used in more than 600,000 classrooms across the nation. They are also inside millions of family homes. The games act as ways for children to continue learning while also playing at home.

GoNoodle CEO and co-founder Scott McQuigg told Forbes the idea for the project began when he and his co-workers noticed their children werent engaging in physical activity, remaining focused on their mobile games instead.

The lack of physical play by our kids and their friends had us concerned they were missing out on the fun of childhood, McQuigg told Forbes. And, we had an increasing awareness that sedentary lives were causing early onset of health conditions like obesity and diabetes in kids. Whether screen time at home, or sitting much of the school day, kids were not moving nearly enough, and it had become a societal issue that had to be fixed.

McQuigg said the greatest challenge he and GoNoodle face is children constantly want to be entertained through devices and screentime.

Indeed, a 2015 study from the journal Pediatrics found that just about 97 percent of children have used mobile devices before the age of 1. These youngsters used technology for chores, quiet time and right before bed. In fact, children spent their screen time looking at a specific mobile device, like a tablet or smartphone, as well as watching television.

This has led to medical professionals suggesting specific time limits for children when it comes to screen time. Back in 2015, a group of pediatricians said children under 2 years old shouldnt spend more than two hours per day on a screen, according to The Wall Street Journal.

More recently, the American Academy of Pediatrics unveiled a new set of guidelines for parents to follow, according to CNN. The AAP said that todays enhanced digital world makes it difficult to set out hard and fast rules for how long children should spend on their screens. Rather, the AAP suggests that parents limit their childs time spent using digital devices for entertainment.

The AAP recommends parents take careful consideration with what entertainment their children are exposed to on their digital devices.

"Shows like 'Sesame Street' are much better than standard TV, because they don't have advertisements, which tend to overstimulate children," Dr. Yolanda Reid Chassiakos, lead author of the "Children and Adolescents and Digital Media Technical Report, told CNN.

When it comes to teens, parents may want to monitor how often their older children use smart devices, encouraging such activities as family time or device-free dinners to help them stay offline, according to CNN.

"This doesn't mean you can't play video games with your kids," Chassiakos said. "What's most important is that families have media-free time, and when digital media is used, it's used mainly for communication rather than entertainment."

And while parents have worked to eliminate digital devices from the home, educators have moved to add smart devices and tech into the classroom, according to Gizmodo. This is true for students in preschool through college. In fact, 73 percent of teachers said they used technology to enhance their instructions or to have children complete their work, Gizmodo reported.

And, as Gizmodo reported, research has found benefits to using this sort of technology. Of course, challenges still exist, like in schools where technology is not allowed.

There is also the question of cost. Of course, theres a price associated with schools purchasing the technology (and bringing teachers up to speed), according to Gizmodo. But even having kids bring their own devices can be an issue. Bring-your-own-device policies may draw attention to situations where some students are more privileged than others, and there is always the potential for theft.

Still, with projects like GoNoodle, education and screen time appear to be working side by side.

Theres growing awareness that an active kid is a kid that is ready to learn and has many realizing physical activitys rightful place before, during and after school, McQuigg told Forbes.
Its toxic: New study says blue light from tech devices can speed up blindness
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A new study from the University of Toledo found that blue light from digital devices can transform molecules in your eyes retina into cell killers. - photo by Herb Scribner
It turns out checking Twitter or Facebook before bed is bad for your health.

A new study from the University of Toledo found that blue light from digital devices can transform molecules in your eyes retina into cell killers.

That process can lead to age-related macular degeneration, which is a leading cause of blindness in the United States, according to the researchs extract.

Blue light is a common issue for many modern Americans. Blue light is emitted from screens, most notably at night, causing sleep loss, eye strain and a number of other issues.

Dr. Ajith Karunarathne, assistant professor in the UT Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, said our constant exposure to blue light cant be blocked by the lens or cornea.

"It's no secret that blue light harms our vision by damaging the eye's retina. Our experiments explain how this happens, and we hope this leads to therapies that slow macular degeneration, such as a new kind of eye drop, he said.

Macular degeneration is an incurable eye disease that often affects those in their 50s or 60s. It occurs after the death of photoreceptor cells in the retina. Those cells need retinal to sense light and help signal the brain.

The research team found blue light exposure created poisonous chemical molecules that killed photoreceptor cells

"It's toxic. If you shine blue light on retinal, the retinal kills photoreceptor cells as the signaling molecule on the membrane dissolves," said Kasun Ratnayake, a Ph.D. student researcher working in Karunarathne's cellular photo chemistry group. "Photoreceptor cells do not regenerate in the eye. When they're dead, they're dead for good."

However, the researchers found a molecule called alpha-tocopherol, which comes from Vitamin E, can help prevent cell death, according to Futurism.

The researchers plan to review how light from TVs, cellphones and tablet screens affect the eyes as well.

"If you look at the amount of light coming out of your cellphone, it's not great but it seems tolerable," said Dr. John Payton, visiting assistant professor in the UT Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry. "Some cellphone companies are adding blue-light filters to the screens, and I think that is a good idea."

Indeed, Apple released a Night Shift mode two years ago to help quell blue lights strain on the eyes, according to The Verge. The screen will dim into a warmer, orange light that will cause less stress on the eyes.