8th Avenue. Not sure if I did the picture correctly. |
The "small children" are not alone if they're with other, older kids. |
You want me to get a babysitter for my seventh grader? Seriously? 😂. I mean you are right there are choices and I know my kid, but we should be helping our kids grow up and do developmentally appropriate things. |
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I'm less concerned about once they get home. It's the route home that's more important. I know the house is safe. |
| 9 |
| Anywhere near 10. 9.75 yo DD calls me to tell me she got in. |
| I'm not sure the exact age, and it comes down to a million factors (responsibility of kids, neighborhood, how late you get home, back up plan, etc, etc) but I think nearly all healthy 11 year old middle schoolers would be absolutely fine for this. |
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This totally depends on your kid. My oldest was fine being home alone but then got worried about break ins as he got more aware of news and current events. He started coming home alone in 5th or 6th grade.
My younger kid didn’t have those fears and was fine being home alone at a much younger age. We didn’t have the same issue being home alone after school because of older siblings but left her home for periods of time when we were at siblings games or sports practices probably starting at age 8/9. |
This was it for us as well. It's not every day, but it happens. |
shockingly, i live in a place where they don't even have to worry about locking the door |
I was a latchkey kid in first grade, which was probably too young, but I managed. I can't imagine worrying about a middle schooler. |
| 9 |
Don't get your kid a phone at 10! All of the research is pointing to this being a bad decision. Get a watch and lock it down if you need some way to contact them or know where they are. We got our DD a watch at 11 and it's been more than enough for what she needs and we restricted things she does not need or is not old enough for yet. The watch ends up being only a little bit interesting because she can text and call people but does not capture her attention for long periods of time like a phone would. |
| 10-11 for most kids. But once they are teens, we went backward for a bit and wanted an adult home as much as possible. |
| 14 |