“…Instead, low-SES children often act as their parents' technology helper and teacher, including providing technical assistance (e.g., turning on devices and connecting to the Internet) and helping broker and translate information for parents (e.g., online shopping, visiting doctors, and learning about local resources) [10, 23-26, 30, 39, 43, 44]. Note that despite these differences in parental involvement across socioeconomic statuses, many similarities exist, such as valuing family time around technology, deploying digital tools as electronic babysitters or to reward desired behaviors, controlling media access, and monitoring children's media engagement [1,10,12,36,44,60].…”