The Princess of Wales is once again putting early childhood at the center of the national conversation — this time with a groundbreaking £100,000 study into how digital devices are shaping the lives of young children. As screens become part of everyday family life, her Early Childhood foundation is asking the question every parent has wondered: What is all this constant digital noise really doing to our kids? The research will explore “technoference” — those moments when phones, tablets or notifications interrupt the crucial face-to-face connection children need for healthy emotional and social development. It’s an issue the Princess has called an “epidemic of disconnection,” and one that families everywhere are beginning to feel more deeply as technology becomes harder to put down. By investing in this study, the Princess isn’t pointing fingers — she’s searching for real answers, practical guidance, and ways to help parents navigate the digital world with confidence, not guilt. This could be a major turning point in how we understand early childhood development in an age where attention is constantly divided. And the surprising insight behind why this study was launched now is something every parent will want to hear

Princess of Wales' foundation announces £100,000 study into impact of digital devices on children

When the Royal Foundation Centre for Early Childhood announced it will back a £100,000 study into how digital devices affect young children and parent-child relationships, it quietly sent a strong signal: the digital age isn’t just rewiring our screens — it might be rewiring our families. HELLO!+2The Modems+2

Here’s why this move matters — and why you, as a parent, caregiver or simply someone curious about what technology is doing to our youngest generation, will want to read on.

 1. A Royal Stamp on an Everyday Crisis

The Princess of Wales has long made early childhood development a central cause. By placing this study at the heart of her foundation’s work, she’s elevating what many families quietly worry about: the tug-of-war between screen time and meaningful connection.

In an essay published earlier this year, she described what she called an “epidemic of disconnection” — not among adults and workplaces, but within our homes. People.com

Now, the £100,000 research call will focus specifically on a concept called “technoference” — when digital devices disrupt face-to-face interaction and interfere with the bonding young children need. HELLO!

 2. The Gap in What We Know (and What This Study Aims to Fix)

We’ve seen dozens of studies about kids using tablets or phones. But this one shifts the lens:

  • Instead of just how much time children spend on devices, it asks when and why parents or caregivers themselves turn to screens while around kids. The Modems

  • It aims to understand how those micro-moments of distraction reshape the social and emotional scaffolding children build in their early years — from birth to age five — when brain wiring happens fastest.

  • The findings will be used to craft practical resources for health visitors, early‐years educators, and family support services — not just academic theory. HELLO!

In short, this isn’t about finger‐pointing at screens. It’s about understanding how our habits, devices and attention patterns shape children’s development.

 3. Why It Could Impact Every Family

The Princess of Wales visits Home-start Oxford to see Royal Foundation Centre for Early Childhood animations in action - CFEC

Whether you’re a tech-aware parent or feel you’ve got everything under control, the ripple effects of this study will matter.

  • Early childhood is the period when children develop social awareness, emotional regulation, language skills and relationship habits. Interruptions in that period can have long-term outcomes.

  • The study recognises that devices aren’t inherently bad — but that how we use them when children are present can change the emotional quality of the moment.

  • As digital devices become more entwined with daily life (work, socialising, parenting), families may benefit from clearer guidance on how to be present while still engaging with technology responsibly.

 4. The Princess of Wales Himself Sets the Tone

The Princess of Wales joins play session for families and children with special educational needs as part of 'shaping us' campaign on early childhood - Royal Foundation

This isn’t theoretical. The Princess and her husband, the Prince of Wales, have publicly stated that their own children do not use smartphones at a young age — emphasising quality family time over constant connectivity. Vanity Fair

Her earlier essay, co-written with Harvard’s Robert Waldinger, notes:

“We’re physically present but mentally absent… Our smartphones, tablets and computers have become sources of constant distraction, fragmenting our focus.” AP News+1

This new study carries that ethos into actionable research: from royal principle to practical inquiry.

 5. What to Watch For

  • The call for proposals: Which research teams will be chosen? What methods will they use?

  • Study outcomes: Not just “yes or no” answers, but real insights into how device use affects early emotional and cognitive architecture.

  • Resources launched: What support will emerge for families, educators and policymakers?

  • Wider impact: Will this seal a shift in parenting norms, device policies or early-years practices?

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