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David Walsh, Ph.D.
Committed to the belief that we must work to maximize
the benefits and minimize the harm of media's impact on
children, David Walsh, Ph.D., founded the National Institute
on Media and the Family in 1996. As President, Dr. Walsh
spearheads the Institute's efforts to provide information
about media to parents, teachers, and other concerned
adults-through education, research, and advocacy.
Psychologist, educator, family therapist,
author, speaker, husband, and father of three, David Walsh
is one of the leading authorities in North America on
family life, parenting, and the impact of media on children.
He is also a leading voice in addressing the issues of
media's impact on brain development in children.
Dr. Walsh is: the spokesperson for the American
Medical Association's media violence campaign; a participant
in the "Safe From the Start" summit hosted by
the Departments of Justice and Health and Human Services,
and the Vice President's national round table on "Media's
Effect on Children;" author of several books including,
Selling Out America's Children: How America Puts Profits
Before Values and What Parents Can Do; and has joined
forces with Target stores' Take Charge of Education Program
by creating "Dr. Dave's Family Favorites," a
recommended reading list for children ages 1 - 18. Walsh
is also a frequent guest on national programs such as:
The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer; Dateline NBC;
CBS This Morning; and National Public Radio. His
editorials have appeared in The Washington Post and
The New York Times.
Walsh's seminal work on the impact of the
media on society, Selling Out America's Children: How
America Puts Profits Before Values And What Parents Can
Do (Fairview Press, 1994), was widely hailed as a
ground-breaking book in identifying the full scope of
violence in the media as a major national public health
issue. His first book, Designer Kids (Deaconess
Press, 1990) looked at how children are affected by America's
obsession with consumerism and competition. In his latest
book Why Do They Act That Way: A Survival Guide to
the Adolescent Brain for You and Your Teen (Free Press,
2004), Dr. Walsh explains exactly what happens to the
human brain on the path from childhood into adolescence
and adulthood.
Before founding the National Institute on
Media and the Family, Walsh was the executive director
of clinics and systems operations for Fairview Behavioral
Services, a division of Fairview Health Services, Minneapolis.
He has been affiliated with Fairview for more than 20
years, serving as Director of Behavior Services, chemical
dependency services, treatment programs, a family renewal
center, and outpatient counseling services. Fairview Health
Services has had a long-standing commitment to strengthening
families and the community, and is a founding sponsor
of the National Institute on Media and the Family.
Dr. Walsh is on the faculty of University
of St. Thomas and the University of Minnesota, and has
published many articles in the professional and general
press. He is active in many professional associations
and is a Licensed Psychologist in the State of Minnesota.
Dr. Walsh is the recipient of numerous awards,
including the 1999 Minnesota Council on Family Relations'
Friend of the Family Award; Minnesota Medical Association's
1995 Stop the Violence Award; the 1995 Community Service
Award presented by the Jewish Community Center of Minneapolis
for efforts on behalf of children; the Harriet Burns Award
for Professional Psychology, presented by the University
of St. Thomas to the outstanding Minnesota Psychologist
in 1992; and the 1992 Wheel Forum Award for contributors
to family life education. He is a member of the American
Psychological Association and the Minnesota Psychological
Association.
David Walsh lives in Minneapolis with his
wife, Monica, and has three grown children.
Committed to the belief that parents, teachers,
health care professionals, corporations, advertisers and
media must address media use as a public health priority,
the National Institute on Media and the Family is dedicated
to promoting the positive use of media in building healthy
families and healthy communities.
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