Type,"Title (Orig.)","Title (Engl. transl.)",Authors,Year,Language,"Type of publication","Main Results","Theoretical contribution","Implications for parents","Implications for educational professionals","Implications for policy makers","Implications for other stakeholders",DOI,"Evidence Base URL" Publication,"A Qualitative Inquiry into the Contextualized Parental Mediation Practices of Young Children’s Digital Media Use at Home",,"Zaman B.;Nouwen M.;Vanattenhoven J.;de Ferrerre E.;Looy J.",2015,English,"Journal article","""Parents believe that they cannot counter the advent of digital media even when holding negative attitudes towards it and should, instead, keep up with the changing technology landscape to acknowledge beneficial uses. Parents do exert content and time restrictions in order to avoid negative effects, just like device, location, and purchase restrictions revealing the need to find ways to punish the child. Parents also discussed time and budget decisions to justify or negotiate the rules, hereby often pointing to transitions between active and restrictive mediation. However, positive motivations like seeking shared media enjoyment can induce co-use. This study also pointed to new practices, making a distinction between the parent as helper and buddy. Buddy practices could result from intentional actions as well as routine and family practices. Co-use and active mediation were strongly interwoven. Parents learned from or together with their children, using the term particpatory learning. Taking into account children’s agency both in relation to and beyond media use. We hereby reopen the debate on the appropriateness of the term “mediation” as parents do more than simply mediating negative media effects. We strongly encourage future researchers to pay more attention to this mediation practice."" (Zaman et al., 2016, pp. 14-16)",Yes,,,,Researchers,10.1080/08838151.2015.1127240,https://base.core-evidence.eu/publications/23