Popular Gaming Myths
Here's a pretty cool article/essay about the common misconceptions and myths about video games. It's written by an MIT professor for PBS. I'd show my dad this but I'm sure he'd still believe that playing violent video games is training me to join the U.S. Army. You'd think articles like this would have cropped up sooner, but then most of us who play games don't care enough to take the time to write rebuttal arguments. We'd rather just keep playing.
Here's the first "myth" from the article.
Matthew.
Here's the first "myth" from the article.
1. The availability of video games has led to an epidemic of youth violence.
According to federal crime statistics, the rate of juvenile violent crime in the United States is at a 30-year low. Researchers find that people serving time for violent crimes typically consume less media before committing their crimes than the average person in the general population. It's true that young offenders who have committed school shootings in America have also been game players. But young people in general are more likely to be gamers — 90 percent of boys and 40 percent of girls play. The overwhelming majority of kids who play do NOT commit antisocial acts. According to a 2001 U.S. Surgeon General's report, the strongest risk factors for school shootings centered on mental stability and the quality of home life, not media exposure. The moral panic over violent video games is doubly harmful. It has led adult authorities to be more suspicious and hostile to many kids who already feel cut off from the system. It also misdirects energy away from eliminating the actual causes of youth violence and allows problems to continue to fester.
Matthew.
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