Toggle navigation
Toggle navigation
Home
DCUM Forums
Nanny Forums
Events
About DCUM
Advertising
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics
FAQs and Guidelines
Privacy Policy
Your current identity is: Anonymous
Login
Preview
Subject:
Forum Index
»
General Parenting Discussion
Reply to "Kids and “work before play”"
Subject:
Emoticons
More smilies
Text Color:
Default
Dark Red
Red
Orange
Brown
Yellow
Green
Olive
Cyan
Blue
Dark Blue
Violet
White
Black
Font:
Very Small
Small
Normal
Big
Giant
Close Marks
[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I believe in "work before play" but I think I have a totally different outlook/approach to you. First off, we don't view screen time as "play time" and it's not something my kids are entitled to daily. They can watch screens, but they don't have iPads and screen time usually means sitting down to watch a TV show or movie. And those have a finite length. Sure, I might say "okay you can watch 4 episodes of Bluey" because those episodes are short. But the only time we let our kids camp out and just let the shows autoplay is if they are sick and need to be resting anyway. Otherwise it's "yes you can watch this one show." And that makes it easy to say they need to clean up their rooms or put away toys or finish homework before watching, because it's a discrete thing. Yes they whine and complain sometimes when I say they need to finish homework or chores before playing (or watching TV, which again, I don't view as a play activity). Oh well. Kids whine sometimes. If they straight up refuse, then they don't get the play or screen reward, it's an easy built in consequence. Sometimes they will resist doing the "work" because they are tired, and I can see that they are genuinely very tired. This most often happens in the afternoon or evening after a busy day of school or other activities. In those cases, I will sometimes acknowledge that they are reasonably worn out, and let them watch TV as a way to rest or relax. It still has a time limit on it (we never watch TV without a set time limit). And we might allow them to postpone certain chores until the next day if it's clear they need to rest and the chores aren't urgent. Or sometimes we'll help them complete the chore if they need some help. It's important to remember that kids often work really hard at school and they need breaks just like adults. If some nights we do takeout or put off the laundry because we're totally wiped out from work, we have to allow the kids to do that too. The work is the stuff we did all day, and sometimes you just need to come home and veg out a little to recover.[/quote] Bluey? Come back to us when you have a middle school kid. Even if you wait until 8th, the time will come when you have to actually deal with these issues.[/quote] OP has a kindergartener and a 3rd grader, as well as a middle schooler. This is also an issue with elementary kids and OP is obviously asking for those kids as well. I'd also argue that setting these expectations with younger kids can make it easier when they are older because the habits and boundaries are firmly in place as you begin to deal with issues like texting with friends and social media. I'm the PP and I have a kid in 1st (who still watches Bluey) and a kid in 4th. The 4th grader mostly watches movies, not TV shows. Neither of my kids just watch YouTube on autoplay all day. If that's an issue you are dealing with in middle school, my suggestion is that you were too lax about screen time when they were younger. Come back to us when you learn how to set limits and parent properly.[/quote] No, not lax. I had it all figured out when my oldest was in 4th grade. Then the kids got older. And what worked when they were younger wasn't what was needed when they were older. [/quote] Look, if you want to offer advice to OP based on your experience parenting older kids, have at it. I have two kids who are close in age to two of OP's kids, and have found a solution to this problem that works well for my family, and shared it. I'm not going to apologize for that. Obviously older kids might need something different. If you know what that is, feel free to share it -- I won't weigh in as it is out of my wheelhouse. Stop attacking me just because you are apparently mad that I am happy with the balance we've struck on screens and homework and chores for my elementary age kids. Ask yourself why other people's confidence and competence with regards to parenting triggers you this much.[/quote] I don't have advice, we're struggling with this here. With homework and school classwork all being on screens, with varying school and after school schedules so no regular evening routine, it's hard. It was a lot easier in grade school with few after school commitments. My kids were used to screentime limits and playing after school, even in the winter with the early sunsets. Now, they are on screens all day at school and on screens at home for homework and to play video games with friends/chat via Discord. They do sports and music and have chores. All playtime though seems to be screens nowadays and we're struggling with that. [/quote]
Options
Disable HTML in this message
Disable BB Code in this message
Disable smilies in this message
Review message
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics