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barbara
10-08-2006, 12:22 AM
Life With the TV


Not everything that comes through TV is bad. However, because the average child between two and 11 years old watches over 27 hours of poorly supervised television per week; because the only thing that kids do more than watch television is sleep, and because most parents are unaware of the indecent liberties that television takes with our children, you must control this 19 inch Shaitan, as a friend of mine calls it.

1) Halal (permissible) and Haram (forbidden) on TV: TV programs include stirring documentaries about history, science, and nature as well as excellent dramatizations of classics. It also includes a lot of Haram in terms of violence, sex, antifamily and anti-Islamic values in cartoons, sitcoms, talk shows and films. It's the job of parents to observe Halal and Haram on TV programs and guide their children. One rule you can use when teaching your kids the right and wrong of television is the following: if it's Haram to do then, it's Haram to watch.

2) TV Rules for Children: A carefully programmed TV can be a beneficial ally! Set clear rules for your children on how much TV they can watch, when they can watch it, and which shows are permitted. Then stick to your policy no matter how many tears and voices protest. You are the boss. You can unplug the television whenever you want to.

3) Don't Just Allow "Watching TV": Allow children to watch a particular program which you have approved, not just "watch TV."

4) No Channel Surfing: Channel surfing usually means watching the worst of the shows which are on at any given moment. More stops at sex and violence scenes.

5) Homework First: Insist that homework and chores be done before TV is turned on. (No this is not considered child abuse, not at least in Illinois where I live.) Only one in ten parents require children to do homework first at this moment.

6) Watch Together: Watch TV with your children. It will be lots of fun. You might have some topics to talk about later. You may share some laughter as well. If you cannot watch with them all the time, at least do it occasionally.

7) Talk to Children about the Programs: Talking to your children about the programs they watched or you watched together will give you an opportunity to debrief them about the rights and wrongs in them.

8) Never Use TV as Babysitter: No matter what, don't just train your little Muslim to become an avid TV watcher by letting TV calm him down when he is crying or when you want to do something else other than attend to the baby. Also make this rule clear to the babysitters you hire as well. If you have no choice but to subject you child to a daycare center, choose one which does not use TV as its control mechanism. Seventy percent of daycare centers use TV during a typical day.

9) A Smaller Screen is Better: A small-sized TV is better than a larger size TV. The larger size encourages worse watching habits.

10) One TV is Better than Two: One TV placed in the living room will help you keep an eye on what is being watched. A TV in your child's bedroom is the worst thing. It is not that you don't trust your children. It is the TV which you don't trust. The average household in America has 2.24 TVs in their homes and 54 percent of kids in America have a TV in their bedrooms.

11) No Cable Channels: With a few exceptions, cable provides more of the bad TV and adult-oriented programming. I was staying at a pious Muslim's home as the TV brought a rush of his kids in the room I was staying in. To my astonishment, they ignored their "uncle's" presence and protest as they intensely watched a hot nude sex scene on some cable channel. Recently in Florida, during the daytime, a cable company showed adult programs.

12) Encourage Commercial-Free Channels: Public Television and other Commercial Free TV have more informative programs. It is estimated that the average child sees 20,000 commercials per year. Unlike adults, who often mute out commercials, or who get up and make a mad dash for the bathroom during the 60 to 180 seconds, children like TV ads. They like to be told what to lobby for...and lobby they do.

13) VCR Gives Parents More Control: VCR gives you control of TV time and programs. Many parents use the VCR more than television programs broadcast scheduled times. Balance your TV consumption with videos of good programming offered by Muslims and non-Muslims. This will be more in your control and will contribute to the learning process of children. Some of the good video programs could be as good as anything on TV. Adam's World for children ages two to nine is one such video series. Tens of thousands of children learn and have fun with Adam and Aneesah.

One day, I noticed Sister Lonnie Ali (Champion Muhammad Ali's wife) had ordered another set of Adam's World. Since I knew they had a complete set of Adam's World, I asked why she was buying another one. She told me that Asad (their son) had watched Adam's World so many times that all the tapes were worn out. She said he must have watched each tape more than 100 times. His game at one point was to say the dialogue before Adam said it.

14) TV Off Days: Some Muslims keep TV off all Ramadan. Every year there is a campaign called TV Turn Off Week, which encourages people to not watch TV for at least a week. You may want to do the same for very personal reasons. Television can affect young children in adverse ways: aggressive behavior, difficulty falling asleep, nightmares and an insatiable appetite for advertised products. If your kids are showing signs of this nature, eliminating TV for a week or so may help.

15) More Family Activities: TV takes away family time. Poorly managed television wastes opportunities for kids to learn how to relate to other people - including their parents and siblings. And relating with their families is a desire of today's youth. In a nationwide, ethnically balanced survey of 750 ten to sixteen-year-olds, "three-quarters said that if they had a choice between watching TV or spending time with their families, they'd opt for family time."

16) Buy a Movie Camera: Yes you read it correctly. Instead of children being subject to TV, give them the tools to control TV. Empower them with technology. Give them a gift of a video camera. Consumer Reports has a lot of recommendations for good camcorders. Let your kids write a script, shoot a video, edit it on their computer, and put it back on VCR or incorporate it in a multimedia production (and send a copy to Sound Vision. That little producer might have more talent than you think.)

17) Plan Your Time: If you develop the habit of developing a personal plan, children are likely to follow you in the considerate use of their time. By developing a plan for using your time, you will learn to place TV time in proper proportion to other things in life which you want to achieve.

18) Start a TV Journal: To make good use of TV programs, ask children to write a report about it. Have them answer questions like: who were the characters? What was the plot? What was good? What was bad? What did the program try to promote? Let them be the critic instead of simply being lost to agenda of television producers.

19) Fight bad TV programs: Always protest wrong types of things inserted by producers in what you and your children watch. If you don't protest and pursue the matter, they will learn that they can get away with this and will do more of it, not less. Call toll-free to record your dislike of a program: 1-800-TV-COUNTS (operated by the Parents' Television Council, a family oriented, non-Muslim group).

20) Stick to Your Guns: Your children will resist all rule-making efforts to limit their TV time and program selection. Discuss your reasoning with them, but stick to your guns. This is a decision about their growing up as Muslims. More than 4,000 studies have proven that the behavior of children is affected by their TV watching habits. You cannot let false images and wrong ideals distort the future of your children. You must help tomorrow's Muslims today by being reasonable, but firm. If you don't control TV, TV will control you, your pocket, your children, and your worldview.

21) Children Follow You: The bottom line principle of parenting is that children follow you. If you are a couch potato, and fail to practice what you preach, don't expect your rules to have any value. Watch what you are watching if you want anyone to follow your rules about TV. Whether you give prime time to your family or to TV will determine the future direction of your life and your children's life.

"O ye who believe! Why do you preach something you are not practicing? It is of most distasteful in the sight of Allah that ye say that which ye do not" (Quran: 61:2-3).

By: Abdul Malik Mujahid
Source: soundvision.com

Milanista23
11-08-2006, 11:23 PM
Jazakillahu khairan for this post.

It is indeed very hard to control the kids over TV programs these days..

aboomohammad
12-08-2006, 09:27 AM
salams
it is true that it is essential to stick to your guns on this issue I am very firm with my kids on what they watch and when and how much TV they should have in their Lives, giving them the option they wouldf get stuck in front of the TV 24/7 if they could.The problem is that my wife is too soft on them, as soon as they cry or cause some trouble she turns on the TV for them and if I am not around they get their way.Parents should be firm on this issue and not let the kids dictate when and what they want to watch. Just a bit of crying should not get them TV time and Ice cream.

Another option I have taken is to give them their own PC without internet.I load it will all Islamic Program, stories of the Prophets ( in cartoon) and Quran and many other stuff. Educational programs, they don't have to be only Islamic, Like talking dictionaries and childrens encyclopedias.The only problems with them is the content of Music in every one of them.But what can we do even some of the so called Islamic stuff end up having some type of music in them.
So this option is favoured rather that TV all the time but the kids know what times their favourite cartoons are on and would insist to watch then. so if you can afford another PC not yours that you use for works, Cause you may need to format and reload every so often and the Kids spoil it too by clicking her and there) but a smaller one for Kids as long as it can accommodate games and Movies, I would suggest thatrather than getting another TV for them.Then you have control on the Movies and games you buy or download for them. It may happen that they end up finding other unfavourable (violent ) games or cartoons from other sources, then yuo have control.For those with a bit of computer knowledge can remove the undesired programs and just leave them with Islamic or favourable stuff. Although I gave my kids their PC to learn the Quran and Islamic stuff my eldest daughter managed to open my stuff and take a games CD belonging to me and loaded it on her computer without my knowledge and all day the kids were just playing Super mario and other games not actually learning anything.After I found out (since I am a computer Engineer) I formatted the Hard drive and left it blank as a punishment for them it was only their mother, who is their advocate, who convinced me just last night to reload it so they can use it again, but my conditions were that it be used for Islamic programs and educational stuff only.
So be firm with the Kids on this issue and please don't be like in My house where father says one thing and mother lets them do another Just to buy peace with the kids, be Firm. If you have to remove a program most come with the uninstall feature in the start menu so you do not affect your computer by removing important files. Also for those who are not too computer literate, just go to Contol Panel and add and remove progarms and just remove that program you don't want then again you are not affecting the other stuff on there.
I have made a rule at home time of Athan , time of salaat no TV even if their favourites are on.
salams all
Aboo Mohammad

Milanista23
12-08-2006, 11:17 AM
I had to smile a lot reading what you do at home, brother :D

Anyway, I have just an opinion which you might not agree with. I think in one way, it is good to let kids play video games, even if it is somehow not very useful. The only thing to be aware with is to switch off the music and all video games have this option of removing it from the option.

I agree they should not use it too often, so something like one hour in a day for video games should be OK!

The reason is that playing video games give your mind a lot of thinking and creativity. It really helps building up the mind. But maybe you still have many games which build up the mind ;)

By the way, what was Supermario doing in your PC? :D

aboomohammad
12-08-2006, 09:39 PM
I had to smile a lot reading what you do at home, brother :D

Anyway, I have just an opinion which you might not agree with. I think in one way, it is good to let kids play video games, even if it is somehow not very useful. The only thing to be aware with is to switch off the music and all video games have this option of removing it from the option.

I agree they should not use it too often, so something like one hour in a day for video games should be OK!

The reason is that playing video games give your mind a lot of thinking and creativity. It really helps building up the mind. But maybe you still have many games which build up the mind ;)

By the way, what was Supermario doing in your PC? :D
salams bro
Jazakallahu Khairan for the suggestion however with my kids when there are games on the PC they will stay on it all day, some time they will forfiet even food. I don't mind if they are Islamic Games where they are learning islamic Knowledge or even other educational games, but when they spend all day just playing games then that is not healthy for them and also they end up fighting cos one would monopolise the PC and the others will not be able to play.However with the Islamic knowledge or a movie or cartoon about Islam they all sit and watch. I have a lot of cartoons about salahu deen , or tareq bin Zeyad, and so on good ole Islamic history and the stories of the prophets.

Why Is mario on my PC?:icon_lol: well it was not but it was on CDs I had from before that I downloaded when i was not heavily into da'awah I had all these latest games literally hundreds of them.Now I have no time for them Da'awah is more important and the CDs are just there.I used to download Gigabytes worth of Games LOL
Salams
Aboo Mohammad:x016:

numi
08-12-2006, 12:20 AM
thank you very much
alhamd le allah that we had controled our TV
this is very important.

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ammarahnaf
07-11-2008, 01:03 PM
Thank for the post. Its great sharing. That is what happen todays as people become TV worshipper.