This is great. I also have a teenager working despite us having her college, etc., covered and the positive feedback is priceless. Same with taking direction and learning how to work with others when it isn’t just volunteering (which she has also done). |
Same. I look for this. |
Office jobs are for college internships. We are taking about teenagers working. Two different things. |
| My 18 year old is working 60 hours a week. Taking home $1,000 a week after taxes. |
| It's fine if your kid works at a fast food or retail job, also fine if they do internships and volunteering, also fine if they are pursuing some personal project like sports or music. It's more important to be occupied and engaged than the exact thing that is being done. There is no one superior choice. |
You're spoiling your kid. Nice work. |
| Cosine service Jobs are great for teens. They learn so many people skills and their EQ goes way up. |
I am a one perecnter and all of mine work. Of course they had part time jobs in hs and college. The notion that my peers don’t on a whole have their kids work is ridiculous, a gross generalization from either a new money idiot or well… |
| I worked hourly jobs (retail, restaurants) in high school and feel strongly that my kids should do a low rate hourly job at some point. I did not grow up wealthy but those experiences were important to me in 1) understanding what that kind of $ actually buys and 2) respecting how hard people with hourly jobs work. In college I did earn internships in my field, and that was important for my success. My DH grew up wealthy and has never had a job purely for the sake of earning $. His parents helped him get unpaid internships etc to boost his college applications. That was the case for many of the people I went to school with but especially my DHs law school crowd. I still remember being at a store and hearing the cashier talk about how great his second job was because he could sometimes nap for an hour or two- since he was working 2 8 hour shifts most days. |
| 15 yo DD is working 30 hours a week for 5 weeks this summer babysitting. It’s taught her responsibility and that work isn’t always fun but you need to stick it through, be on time, listen to your boss, etc…. She’s also volunteered a week, gone on vacation for 2, and lounged around for the rest. But she’s the type of kid that needs to keep busy. I think it’s good for them. Plus she has her own spending money now and doesn’t bother me all day to driver her around. |
Why is that? Sounds like unresolved issues with your roots. Or you have a problem with kids who know how to deal with people. |
| My kids were raised to work. Games are for relaxing when you aren't working, if you happen to be a gamer. My 16 yr old and my 29 yr old are currently playing Destiny 2 together online when they aren't working. My 16 yr old does not have social media, does not use tik tok, and he plays chess online, not roblox. |
| We are HHI and my parents are extremely wealthy (funded all of their grandchildren’s college). My kids and their cousins have worked since 15. They need to learn how to take direction from other adults. They also get nice vacations and the opportunities to study abroad. |
Good thing jobs provide “experiences,” “further education,” and “social skills.” The part you wrote about experiences makes no sense and is funny. |
Same. My friend is an heiress. Her kid will be working at Starbucks. My friend also held office jobs even when she didn’t need the money. |