Healthy Screen Time Guide for Parents & Caregivers
Practical, research‑informed guidance you can actually use
From Caden Paige Counseling, PLLC
I regularly work with parents, teens, and young adults who feel overwhelmed by the role screens play in daily life. This resource is meant to offer clear, compassionate guidance, without shame or extremes, so technology can be used intentionally and in ways that support emotional health, relationships, and growth.
Why Screen Time Matters
Screens aren’t inherently bad, but unlimited, unstructured, and unsupervised use can quietly shape attention, emotional regulation, sleep, and relationships. The goal isn’t perfection or zero screens. The goal is intentional, developmentally appropriate use that supports, not replaces, real‑world growth.
Children’s brains are designed for connection, movement, creativity, and challenge. Screens should serve those needs, not crowd them out.
General Screen Time Guidelines (By Age)
Toddlers & Preschool (0–5 years)
Recommended: Minimal to no solo screen time
Best use: Short, shared viewing with an adult (educational content)
Avoid: Background TV, fast‑paced or overstimulating shows
Why: Early brains develop best through play, language exposure, and caregiver interaction
Elementary (6–10 years)
Recommended: ~1 hour/day (outside of schoolwork)
Best use: Educational games, creative apps, family movie nights
Avoid: Endless scrolling, unsupervised YouTube access
Key focus: Screens should not replace sleep, outdoor play, or responsibilities
Middle School (11–13 years)
Recommended: 1–2 hours/day
Best use: Skill‑based games, creative projects, monitored social use
Introduce: Clear rules around phones, messaging, and online behavior
Key focus: Boundaries + coaching, not just restriction
Teens (14–18 years)
Recommended: Individualized limits based on maturity and mental health
Best use: Balanced use alongside school, social life, responsibilities
Non‑negotiables: No phones overnight, no screens during family meals
Key focus: Self‑regulation, accountability, and digital citizenship
Signs Screen Time May Be a Problem
Increased irritability or emotional outbursts when screens are removed
Difficulty focusing or completing tasks
Sleep problems or staying up late on devices
Loss of interest in hobbies, friends, or family time
Heightened anxiety, low mood, or social withdrawal
If you’re noticing several of these consistently, it may be time to reset.
Creating a Healthy Screen Time Plan
1. Set Clear, Predictable Limits
Children do best when expectations are known in advance.
Decide when screens are allowed (after homework, weekends, etc.)
Decide where screens are allowed (shared spaces only)
Decide what content is acceptable
2. Use Screens as a Privilege, Not a Pacifier
Screens should not be the primary tool for calming emotions.
Teach coping skills: movement, breathing, connection, rest
Use screens intentionally, not automatically
3. Prioritize Sleep
No screens 1 hour before bedtime
Devices charge outside bedrooms
Use alarms instead of phones
4. Model What You Want to See
Children notice adult behavior more than rules.
Put phones down during conversations
Take breaks from social media
Show healthy boundaries yourself
Family Screen Time Agreement
Consider creating a written family agreement that includes:
Daily screen limits
Approved apps/platforms
Consequences for breaking rules
Weekly check‑ins to adjust as needed
This helps shift screen time from power struggles to shared responsibility.
A Note for Teens & Young Adults
Screens are a normal part of modern life, and needing help managing them is not a weakness. But when screen use starts to interfere with sleep, mood, motivation, or relationships, it’s worth paying attention.
You might benefit from a reset if you notice:
Feeling more anxious, numb, or irritable after scrolling
Trouble sleeping or staying focused at school or work
Constant comparison to others online
Using screens to avoid stress, conflict, or difficult emotions
Healthy digital habits include:
Keeping phones out of reach during sleep
Choosing content that supports your mental health
Balancing screens with movement, creativity, and real‑world connection
Being honest with yourself about how screens make you feel
Learning to manage technology now is a life skill, not a punishment.
When to Seek Extra Support
If screen use is tied to:
Anxiety or depression
School refusal or academic decline
Aggression or emotional dysregulation
Isolation or significant behavior changes
…it may be helpful to speak with a licensed mental health professional.
Final Encouragement
You’re not failing if screens have crept in, you’re parenting (and growing up) in a digital world that didn’t come with a manual. Small, consistent changes matter far more than drastic overhauls.
Children don’t need perfect parents.
They need present, grounded, and willing ones.
“My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.” (2 Corinthians 12:9)
If screen time has become a source of stress in your home or personal life, counseling can help.
To learn more about support for parents, teens, and young adults, visit www.cadenpaige.com.
This resource is for educational purposes and does not replace individualized mental health care.