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Essay / The End of the Game - 1438
The days of playing kickball and flying kites in the park on a Saturday afternoon are long gone. Children in today's society would probably prefer to stay indoors playing Guitar Hero on their Xbox or watching the latest episodes of their favorite TV show in their free time. Time for imaginative and physical play is gradually pushed aside as the years pass, and space is given to empty, redundant television shows and video games. The essence of play in children is gradually diminishing as today's society encourages the idea of growing up as quickly as possible. By allowing children to indulge in as much television and video games as they want, the problem of childhood obesity is introduced since outdoor play and physical activities are no longer of great importance to children today. Children should be given limited time to watch television or play video games so that they learn the important benefits of outdoor play and imagination, which would ultimately lead to a healthier lifestyle. In Marie Winn's article titled "The End of Play", she addresses the theme of how children today seem to be losing their sense of being children. Compared to children of previous generations, children of today's society have interests and occupations that parallel those of today's adults (Gagner 1). They seem to lose touch with their inner child and move directly into adulthood About twenty years ago. , a child was easily distinguished from an adult because of his or her interests, but since then, television and video games have replaced the imaginative play that children once enjoyed (Winning 2 In Winn's article, a). parent of two school-aged children mentions that it is in the middle of a paper that relationships must be shaped effectively (Winn 29). encouragement of obesity and the inability to function socially have a common factor that ties them together. They are all negatively influenced by the presence of television and video games. The regulation of television and video games has only recently come to attention, but is it too late to reverse the effects it is having on the current generation of children? There is little that can be done to reverse the leniency granted by society over the past two decades, other than educate children and place more restrictions on what is broadcast and marketed to their age group . Children are a very important fundamental part of society because they are, after all, the ones who will lead our future and subsequent generations..