Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 204
Trim: 5½ x 8½
978-1-5381-9297-9 • Paperback • April 2025 • $22.00 • (£16.99)
978-1-5381-9298-6 • eBook • April 2025 • $21.00 • (£15.99) (coming soon)
Carrie Rogers-Whitehead is the founder of Digital Respons-Ability, a mission-based company that has taught tens of thousands of parents, students, and educators around the world. Carrie is an adjunct instructor, former librarian, and regularly consults and trains on technology, online safety, education, parenting, and more. She is an award-winning author of seven books, most recently Deepening Digital Citizenship: A Guide to Systemwide Policy and Practice. Carrie lives with her family in Utah.
Technology for Littles is an essential, modern-day guide for parents navigating the complexities of digital citizenship, technology use, and gaming for young children with practical strategies and research-based advice. It draws on author Carrie Rogers-Whitehead’s extensive experience as a parent and educator, providing ready-to-use tools and resources to help parents create long-lasting, healthy digital habits for kids.
— Tim Needles, educator and author of STEAM Power
Technology for Littles is the guide we need to raise our children to have healthy digital habits. It gives us a practical guide for navigating the digital age starting when our children are born. Through research, and Carrie’s own parenting experiences, you will gain insight on how to help our children thrive in today’s connected world. We know our digital habits are often unhealthy, and children are always watching what we do. With this book, you will have the toolkit for healthy tech routines that foster digital literacy and protect our children’s privacy. This book will help you empower your children to be tech-savvy while they are very young in order to create a healthy digital environment. Use this book as a roadmap for mindful and balanced technology integration that starts when our children are babies. This is a guide that you will pick up often as your child reaches important milestones both on and offline.
— Laurie Guyon, lead coordinator for Instructional Technology Programs, WSWHE BOCES