Sesame Street Study Finds Kids Fear Violence

ByABC News
May 28, 2001, 10:08 PM

N E W   Y O R K,  May 29 -- American children ages 6 to 11 fret over guns, death, violence and the environment according to a new study by the creators of Sesame Street.

The Sesame Workshop (formerly called the Children's Television Workshop) conducted the study to get a handle on the educational and developmental needs of children ages 6 to 11 and to come up with educational media content for that age group.

In the pursuit of ideas about learning programs, researchers tapped into a surprising fear of violence in a majority of the kids interviewed.

The qualitative study allowed 233 children of diverse ethnic backgrounds from across the country to use cameras, art work, collages from newspapers and magazines, and mini-essays to describe their lives including their hopes and fears in workbooks.

Susan Royer, the vice president of research strategy at Sesame Workshop, says the kid's responses reveal that the "adult world" affects them very deeply.

"We were surprised, I think, at the presence of the adult world so much in the child's world, kind of the sprawl of adulthood onto childhood," Royer told ABCNEWS' Good Morning America.

"Certainly that was evidenced in the kids' fears not just of death, which might be considered normal at this age but really, kind of the accompaniment of violence and more adult things as it relates to those issues."

Kid Fears

When asked to state their fears, nearly two-thirds of the children vividly depicted intense unsettling anxieties about guns, death and violence. Among the 9-to-11-year-olds, the proportion indicating such fears was three-fourths.

Asked what they were afraid of, Eric Najera, for instance, depicted his fears with a picture of a kidnapping.

"Lots of time, I'm like scared," he said. "There's people there's people like gangsters, hanging around, marking their area."

Robby Janeczek said he's worried about school shootings. To depict his fears, he had a workbook with the letters RIP on it.

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