Kid Health Experts Attack Video Game Summer Camp 123
Jack Action writes "The University of British Columbia runs a summer camp where kids get to play computer games for three hours a day. The camp organizers say it is 'a good social opportunity for some kids who didn't fit into other programs.' However, health professionals declare they are 'troubled' by the camp. A professor in UBC's department of medicine says kids should be outside and engaged in 'unstructured play,' while the CEO of an NGO that monitors kids' health chimes in that they already spend too much time in front of screens and not exercising. Do the health experts have a point, or are they just criticizing something they don't understand, or perhaps is not to their taste?"
Unstructured Play? (Score:2, Funny)
Just Cause 2 is pretty unstructured.
One time... (Score:2, Funny)
video games = violence (Score:2, Funny)
Re:One time... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:video games = violence (Score:3, Funny)
At least we'll be able to outrun them when they come for us!
Re:Lets Do the Math (Score:5, Funny)
these are teen and pre-teen boys, you left out 3 hours a day for masturbation
I thought that counted as exercise....
Re:One time... (Score:4, Funny)
...into my TV because I wasn't wearing the protective...
Go out and paint some graffiti, you lazy kids. (Score:1, Funny)
I was thinking of this subject just this morning. Kids sitting inside and playing video games is considered bad, they need to go outside. But once they are outside, there isn't really anything for them. Sure, some people play football or similar, but they're the ones that would do so anyway. In the end, the best society has to offer seems to be spray cans for painting graffiti.
Why is it that we (society) try to encourage these kids to go out and paint graffiti, instead of playing games?