Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Or rather:
- why do you give your children social media, when it is designed to addict them, and is known to be harmful to children and teens?
Because like it or not, SM is a permanent part of our lives and I would prefer to have some oversight on their early interactions with it.
This is a good answer, kind of like parents who like to be the ones to introduce kids to responsible alcohol consumption in their teens by offering small classes of wine at family dinners or something. I can get behind this.
But I think I'd want to limit it a lot. What I really wish is that we could get more traction with parent communities and schools coming together to limit phone use and social media use along the same principles. Because that's what makes it hard. There are always some parents who give their kids early carte blanche access and even if your child doesn't hang out with those kids, it trickles down and creates a lower floor for what kids consider "reasonable" social media use.
So I'd love to hear what kind of oversight you have -- how old were your kids when you gave them access, which apps, what kind of use, how do you monitor, and do you ever worry that they are doing things you don't know about (like finsta accounts)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Or rather:
- why do you give your children social media, when it is designed to addict them, and is known to be harmful to children and teens?
Because like it or not, SM is a permanent part of our lives and I would prefer to have some oversight on their early interactions with it.
This is a good answer, kind of like parents who like to be the ones to introduce kids to responsible alcohol consumption in their teens by offering small classes of wine at family dinners or something. I can get behind this.
But I think I'd want to limit it a lot. What I really wish is that we could get more traction with parent communities and schools coming together to limit phone use and social media use along the same principles. Because that's what makes it hard. There are always some parents who give their kids early carte blanche access and even if your child doesn't hang out with those kids, it trickles down and creates a lower floor for what kids consider "reasonable" social media use.
So I'd love to hear what kind of oversight you have -- how old were your kids when you gave them access, which apps, what kind of use, how do you monitor, and do you ever worry that they are doing things you don't know about (like finsta accounts)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Or rather:
- why do you give your children social media, when it is designed to addict them, and is known to be harmful to children and teens?
Because like it or not, SM is a permanent part of our lives and I would prefer to have some oversight on their early interactions with it.
Anonymous wrote:I don't. I'm hoping they thank me later. Oldest not yet in high school, though, which is when it may be hard to hold out.
My closest childhood friend works for one of the big Silicon Valley companies. Her kids go to "Forest School" and she tries not to let them see the parents on devices at all. She's seen into the belly of the beast and knows enough to be scared.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Or rather:
- why do you give your children social media, when it is designed to addict them, and is known to be harmful to children and teens?
Because like it or not, SM is a permanent part of our lives and I would prefer to have some oversight on their early interactions with it.
Anonymous wrote:Or rather:
- why do you give your children social media, when it is designed to addict them, and is known to be harmful to children and teens?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you have it and why are you on here if it is so harmful? That's the better question.
I am an adult. Perhaps you misunderstood my question? And,
1) DCUMAD is not specifically designed to be addictive, and
2) DCUMAD has little in common with the forms of social media the 30 States Attorney Generals are suing, and
3) unlike the defendant social media companies named in the lawsuit, I am not aware of any peer-reviewed research demonstrating DCUMAD is harmful, particularly to children and teens (who generally do not use DCUMAD).
Anonymous wrote:Why do you have it and why are you on here if it is so harmful? That's the better question.
Anonymous wrote:Why do you have it and why are you on here if it is so harmful? That's the better question.
Anonymous wrote:My teenagers have instagram since that is the means by which several of their high school clubs and friend groups communicate.
Lots of things can be harmful in the extreme, but just fine in moderation, and that includes social media.