YouTube's statistics never cease to amaze: more than 1 billion unique users per month, over 6 billion hours of video watched per month, hours of video uploaded to YouTube every minute. Fine, but what if you want to find something for your kids to watch besides expletive-laced game commentary and twerking videos? If you have younger kids, you could download YouTube's app for kids. But the original YouTube still has legions of kid fans. We set out to find the 10 best channels for kids on YouTube; we wound up with
Austin Boy Scout makes educational video on vaping for teens
YouTube has long had a version of its mobile app called YouTube Kids that provides a limited experience for kids in terms of videos they can watch on the platform. The app is meant to ensure that children aged four years and above watch only age-appropriate content and set a limit to their screen time. For teens and preadolescents, YouTube acknowledges they have a different kind of need for learning and creativity. That is why the service is introducing a new capability that will allow parents to control the type of content teens and tweens can watch through a supervised account. The new experience will launch in beta over the next few months and parents will have the option to choose from any of three different levels of access to YouTube: Explore, Explore more, and Most of YouTube. The second level allows kids aged 13 years and above to watch a broader set of content and live streams similar to those available under Explore.
Austin Boy Scout makes video on vaping for teens to get real information
Objectives: Our objective was to develop a series of short educational videos for teens and parents to watch before pediatric visits to motivate teens to be more actively involved during their visits. Methods: The development of the short educational videos was theoretically guided by Social Cognitive Theory. First we conducted four focus groups with teens ages 11 to 17 with asthma, four focus groups with the teens' parents, and seven focus groups with pediatric providers from four clinics.
In the 50s, utterly well-behaved U. Or so the adults of the era would have you believe. In , the educational film company Coronet Films, founded by the same duo who started Esquire magazine, released a film to teach American high schoolers the proper way to host a house party. The rules to follow are thorough—how to greet guests full introductions are a must , what games to play for goodness sake, nothing that would be a bore!