Shared digital media, new parental challenges: A scoping review of parent–child joint media engagement aged 0–8

Yushu LUO, Yun Nga CHOY, Dandan WU, Yi Hung Eva Lau

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlespeer-review

Abstract

This scoping review reviewed the empirical studies published from 2012 to February 2024, identifying “joint media engagement” as a dynamic and interactive process in which parents and children could share digital activities. After evaluating 44 empirical studies, we found that (1) five JME types were identified in the included articles regarding the specific JME terms: coviewing, couse, joint engagement, parent–child interaction, and parental scaffolding; (2) investigation of JME in existing research could be divided into basic and active levels regarding the extent of parent–child communication; (3) influential factors from family, parents, children, and media consist of a multidimensional framework to describe the correlated factors of JME; (4) general promotion on task performance and language learning, as well as mixed impacts on cognitive development, social–emotional development, and the tendency of less media use. Results implied that future research is supposed to concentrate on associations between complex factors and the effectiveness of JME from comprehensive, cross-cultural perspectives. Furthermore, policymakers, researchers, and educators are supposed to work together to provide specific instruction for parents and their young children. Copyright © 2025 Yushu Luo et al.

Original languageEnglish
Article number9917235
JournalHuman Behavior and Emerging Technologies
Volume2025
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - May 2025

Citation

Luo, Y., Choy, Y. N., Wu, D., & Lau, E. Y. (2025). Shared digital media, new parental challenges: A scoping review of parent–child joint media engagement aged 0–8. Human Behavior and Emerging Technologies, 2025, Article 9917235. https://doi.org/10.1155/hbe2/9917235

Keywords

  • Digital couse
  • Digital parenting
  • Joint media engagement
  • Parental mediation
  • Young child
  • PG student publication

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