Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I was 16, I was headed back to boarding school and my flight was cancelled. I spent about 8 hours in the airport (most of that crying) because I couldn't get ahold of my parents. I remember calling collect on the airport payphone and since it was before cell phones, my parents had gone on a hike and my brother (who was home when I called) couldn't get ahold of them and he didn't have access to a car. Now, I realize that is an extreme case and most kids aren't going to boarding school...but I also remember waiting around at sports practice and getting nervous when someone was late picking me up or when I wasn't sure where to meet someone. I dont think kids need social media and internet on their phones, but when my kid is in middle school and going to friends houses and sports practice - they will have a phone. I think there is a middle ground between toxic, unfettered access to the internet and social media on your phone and a kid who has a phone with five pre-programmed numbers (family) for emergencies and logistics.
None of what you're describing supports the case to have cell phones in use in the middle of the school day. You've cited very strong reasons for kids to have phones in general, but none of these urgent calls about cancelled flights and changes in sports pickup need to occur in the middle of math class. My kids' private middle school does not allow phones during school hours - phones must be kept in lockers and if a kid is caught using their phone, they are confiscated until the end of the day. Phone use is allowed as soon as the school day ends so someone who needs to stay late, needs a ride, whatever, can communicate that with their families. There's no reason for kids to have their devices in class - it's a massive and unnecessary distraction.
Anonymous wrote:The bigger conversation that would be a lot of fun (I mean the kind of fun one only finds in this forum) is how completely effed up our kids are because we gave them cell phones. School policies aren't the problem, WE are the problem. The access to toxic social media and secretive chat apps is the biggest parenting fail in history. The phones and apps are bad enough, but the secrecy iOS provides to children under 18 year olds is disastrous. It's very unlikely your kid will die in a mass shooting at school, and more unlikely their phone would've saved them. More likely is they die of fentanyl laced drugs they accessed through Snapchat. Or that they have severe anxiety or other psycho/physical problems from social media exposure. Or that their nudes are floating around school. Or they are watching and being shaped by horrible influencers. Or that they are just generally addicted to screens and living life in a 2x4 collection of pixels. Do you have the courage to take the phone away? To really learn how to use parental controls, as meek as they are? How about buying your kid the Bark phone and telling them you don't care if it's uncool? Pro tip: If your kid doesn't have a phone yet, check out Bark!! We love our iPhones but they are terrible for kids.
Anonymous wrote:The bigger conversation that would be a lot of fun (I mean the kind of fun one only finds in this forum) is how completely effed up our kids are because we gave them cell phones. School policies aren't the problem, WE are the problem. The access to toxic social media and secretive chat apps is the biggest parenting fail in history. The phones and apps are bad enough, but the secrecy iOS provides to children under 18 year olds is disastrous. It's very unlikely your kid will die in a mass shooting at school, and more unlikely their phone would've saved them. More likely is they die of fentanyl laced drugs they accessed through Snapchat. Or that they have severe anxiety or other psycho/physical problems from social media exposure. Or that their nudes are floating around school. Or they are watching and being shaped by horrible influencers. Or that they are just generally addicted to screens and living life in a 2x4 collection of pixels. Do you have the courage to take the phone away? To really learn how to use parental controls, as meek as they are? How about buying your kid the Bark phone and telling them you don't care if it's uncool? Pro tip: If your kid doesn't have a phone yet, check out Bark!! We love our iPhones but they are terrible for kids.
Anonymous wrote:When I was 16, I was headed back to boarding school and my flight was cancelled. I spent about 8 hours in the airport (most of that crying) because I couldn't get ahold of my parents. I remember calling collect on the airport payphone and since it was before cell phones, my parents had gone on a hike and my brother (who was home when I called) couldn't get ahold of them and he didn't have access to a car. Now, I realize that is an extreme case and most kids aren't going to boarding school...but I also remember waiting around at sports practice and getting nervous when someone was late picking me up or when I wasn't sure where to meet someone. I dont think kids need social media and internet on their phones, but when my kid is in middle school and going to friends houses and sports practice - they will have a phone. I think there is a middle ground between toxic, unfettered access to the internet and social media on your phone and a kid who has a phone with five pre-programmed numbers (family) for emergencies and logistics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids getting murdered in school on a regular basis have contributed immensely to this mind set in parents.
Honest question: how does a cell phone solve this? I get the anxiety, and cell phone access does nothing to solve the actual safety issue.
Anonymous wrote:Kids getting murdered in school on a regular basis have contributed immensely to this mind set in parents.