Research Article

Living with Screens: Screen Time, Family Context, and Executive Function in Early Childhood

Volume: 10 Number: 1 April 2, 2026
TR EN

Living with Screens: Screen Time, Family Context, and Executive Function in Early Childhood

Abstract

A growing body of research highlights the role of screen exposure in the development of executive function in early childhood, particularly within family and home contexts. While previous studies have documented associations between screen time and executive functioning, emerging evidence suggests that the effects of screens may be shaped by broader contextual factors rather than screen duration alone. To address this issue, the present cross-sectional study examined the relationships between children’s executive function skills, screen time patterns and socioeconomic indicators. The participants were 238 preschool-aged children and their parents, who were recruited from early childhood education settings serving families from diverse socioeconomic backgrounds. Executive function skills were assessed using parental reports, and screen exposure was examined in terms of both weekly and daily screen time. The findings showed that as weekly and daily screen time increased, children's average executive function scores decreased. Accordingly, children who spent 6–7 days per week in front of screens were found to have the lowest executive function scores. In contrast, children with less than two hours of screen time per day were found to have significantly higher executive function scores compared to children who spent longer periods in front of screens. The study also revealed that parental education level had no significant effect on children's executive function skills. This study, which examined the role of screen time in executive function development within a family context, contributes to understanding individual differences in executive function skills during early childhood.

Keywords

Supporting Institution

The authors received no financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.

Ethical Statement

The research was approved by the Aksaray University Human Research Ethics Committee (E-34183927-020-00000988161), and participation in the study took into account the written consent of the parents.

References

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Details

Primary Language

English

Subjects

Early Childhood Education

Journal Section

Research Article

Publication Date

April 2, 2026

Submission Date

October 8, 2025

Acceptance Date

March 14, 2026

Published in Issue

Year 2026 Volume: 10 Number: 1

APA
Akıncı Cosgun, A., Yılmaz, M. M., & Levent, E. Ş. (2026). Living with Screens: Screen Time, Family Context, and Executive Function in Early Childhood. International Primary Education Research Journal, 10(1), 30-42. https://doi.org/10.38089/iperj.2026.250
AMA
1.Akıncı Cosgun A, Yılmaz MM, Levent EŞ. Living with Screens: Screen Time, Family Context, and Executive Function in Early Childhood. IPERJ. 2026;10(1):30-42. doi:10.38089/iperj.2026.250
Chicago
Akıncı Cosgun, Aysegul, Melek Merve Yılmaz, and Emine Şükran Levent. 2026. “Living With Screens: Screen Time, Family Context, and Executive Function in Early Childhood”. International Primary Education Research Journal 10 (1): 30-42. https://doi.org/10.38089/iperj.2026.250.
EndNote
Akıncı Cosgun A, Yılmaz MM, Levent EŞ (April 1, 2026) Living with Screens: Screen Time, Family Context, and Executive Function in Early Childhood. International Primary Education Research Journal 10 1 30–42.
IEEE
[1]A. Akıncı Cosgun, M. M. Yılmaz, and E. Ş. Levent, “Living with Screens: Screen Time, Family Context, and Executive Function in Early Childhood”, IPERJ, vol. 10, no. 1, pp. 30–42, Apr. 2026, doi: 10.38089/iperj.2026.250.
ISNAD
Akıncı Cosgun, Aysegul - Yılmaz, Melek Merve - Levent, Emine Şükran. “Living With Screens: Screen Time, Family Context, and Executive Function in Early Childhood”. International Primary Education Research Journal 10/1 (April 1, 2026): 30-42. https://doi.org/10.38089/iperj.2026.250.
JAMA
1.Akıncı Cosgun A, Yılmaz MM, Levent EŞ. Living with Screens: Screen Time, Family Context, and Executive Function in Early Childhood. IPERJ. 2026;10:30–42.
MLA
Akıncı Cosgun, Aysegul, et al. “Living With Screens: Screen Time, Family Context, and Executive Function in Early Childhood”. International Primary Education Research Journal, vol. 10, no. 1, Apr. 2026, pp. 30-42, doi:10.38089/iperj.2026.250.
Vancouver
1.Aysegul Akıncı Cosgun, Melek Merve Yılmaz, Emine Şükran Levent. Living with Screens: Screen Time, Family Context, and Executive Function in Early Childhood. IPERJ. 2026 Apr. 1;10(1):30-42. doi:10.38089/iperj.2026.250