Anonymous wrote:I grew up watching TV all the time in the late 90s - early 2000s and I turned out fine as an adult.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No bueno, why do parents do this? My kids once had a play date with the kids of an acquaintance and the mother plopped tablets in front of her kids at a restaurant table and my kids were expecting to have conversation. It was the ditziest thing I have ever seen in my life, it’s almost like she felt superior that she had tech for her kids and my kids didn’t. There are potential friends for your kid that can detach from devices and engage. You or child will find them.
There are families that think that the tech is good for kids. I honestly can't blame them that much given the example our school systems are setting and the lack of meaningful regulation of tech companies. These devices are intentionally made to be addictive. Yeah I wish more parents were cognizant of the harms of making screens available constantly, but I think there are systemic societal forces that are driving this and chastising individual parents is not going to move the needle.
Those kids are going to be so prepared for the 21st century, though!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No bueno, why do parents do this? My kids once had a play date with the kids of an acquaintance and the mother plopped tablets in front of her kids at a restaurant table and my kids were expecting to have conversation. It was the ditziest thing I have ever seen in my life, it’s almost like she felt superior that she had tech for her kids and my kids didn’t. There are potential friends for your kid that can detach from devices and engage. You or child will find them.
There are families that think that the tech is good for kids. I honestly can't blame them that much given the example our school systems are setting and the lack of meaningful regulation of tech companies. These devices are intentionally made to be addictive. Yeah I wish more parents were cognizant of the harms of making screens available constantly, but I think there are systemic societal forces that are driving this and chastising individual parents is not going to move the needle.
Those kids are going to be so prepared for the 21st century, though!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No bueno, why do parents do this? My kids once had a play date with the kids of an acquaintance and the mother plopped tablets in front of her kids at a restaurant table and my kids were expecting to have conversation. It was the ditziest thing I have ever seen in my life, it’s almost like she felt superior that she had tech for her kids and my kids didn’t. There are potential friends for your kid that can detach from devices and engage. You or child will find them.
There are families that think that the tech is good for kids. I honestly can't blame them that much given the example our school systems are setting and the lack of meaningful regulation of tech companies. These devices are intentionally made to be addictive. Yeah I wish more parents were cognizant of the harms of making screens available constantly, but I think there are systemic societal forces that are driving this and chastising individual parents is not going to move the needle.
Anonymous wrote:We know a family whose child is constantly wanting an iPad, tv, video game, iPhone. The kid can’t eat without watching a video. As soon as we sit down, the kid says he is bored and is asking for a screen. When they have play dates, kids all play on their iPads. When we go to their home, my child is the only one not on a screen. Kids are age 8. My kid is age 9.
Is this just lazy parenting to just allow kids to be on screens all the time???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up watching TV all the time in the late 90s - early 2000s and I turned out fine as an adult.
Not the same. At all.
Anonymous wrote:No bueno, why do parents do this? My kids once had a play date with the kids of an acquaintance and the mother plopped tablets in front of her kids at a restaurant table and my kids were expecting to have conversation. It was the ditziest thing I have ever seen in my life, it’s almost like she felt superior that she had tech for her kids and my kids didn’t. There are potential friends for your kid that can detach from devices and engage. You or child will find them.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up watching TV all the time in the late 90s - early 2000s and I turned out fine as an adult.