'Sesame Street' is so good for kids, scientists say it could probably replace preschool
Jun 10, 2015, 22:09 IST
Nearly five decades since "Sesame Street" went on the air in 1969, the show has amassed more than 1,000 scientific studies, all making the case that television could improve how kids thought and behaved. Now we have one more, and it makes a compelling argument that preschool teachers have some competition with the likes of Big Bird. In the new study, economists Phillip Levine and Melissa Kearney argue kids who watched "Sesame Street" as toddlers went on to do better in elementary school.The benefits were especially strong for boys and non-Hispanic black students. After being exposed to Sesame Street, they were more likely to have peers closer to their age - a sign they weren't getting held back.Kearney and Levine used a clever strategy to collect their data: TV signals. By looking at which households received very high frequency waves, the only kind "Sesame Street" broadcasted in, Kearney and Levine could compare how kids in those parts of the country did in school to kids who were in the dark. Though they couldn't measure kids' progress directly, they found strong connections between Sesame Street viewership and how well kids did.The new study adds to a body of research about how "Sesame Street" helps kids. Past studies have shown children who watch the show enjoy:
- up to 67% higher literacy scores by age 4
- 40% better social skills than non-viewers
- 127% increased interest in eating certain vegetables