Wartella has won research grants from the National Science Foundation (six awards),
the Ounce of Prevention Fund, the Hiatt Foundation, the John and Mary Markle Foundation, the National Cable Television Association, the Hogg Foundation, and the Center for Population Options and has served as a consultant to the
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the Markle Foundation, Microsoft Research, the Federal Trade Commission, the Federal Communications the Children's Television Workshop, and the U.S. Department of Education. She has testified before the U.S. Senate in an inquiry by Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-NY) on a children and media research act, twice before the US House of Representatives Subcommittee on Telecommunications, and before the Federal Trade Commission. In May 2015, at an education conference in Washington, D.C., Wartella discussed a recent survey she led of about 1,000 preschool teachers, in a sampling that included schools serving a range of socioeconomic levels. The survey was a continuation of a previous one held two years prior to that of the more recent. Wartella revealed that from 2012 to 2014, the number of preschool teachers with tablet computers in their classrooms nearly doubled, rising from 29 to 55 percent. More than half of the teachers with tablets said they used the computers to help teach students while three-quarters of them said they used them for administrative tasks, such as emailing parents. There isn't a consensus on how to use these technologies in preschools, with young children and their developing brains, in developmentally appropriate ways, she said. After years of researching the use of technology with students, Wartella was intrigued to see how many parents are monitoring their kids' technology use, and the extent to which they place a higher value on security rather than privacy, she said. Wartella's research has shown that children's interest in and use of technology is driven by parents. "The baby isn't going to be asking for the iPad; parents are going to be giving it to him," she said. "That's not to say, however, that a kid who knows his way around an iPhone is necessarily a bad thing. I don't think there's anything morally superior about not having technology in your life," she said. She says that the American Academy of Pediatrics is currently rethinking its current recommendation of a two-hour screen-time limit per day for children over two years old due to the way technology has changed in the last 10 years. Wartella's studies include data that shows the changing ways that parents are coming to terms with a world where online media is ubiquitous. She was intrigued to see how many parents are monitoring their kids' technology use, and the extent to which they place a higher value on security rather than privacy. Yet, more study is needed to understand this type of addiction and its effects. == Organization involvement ==