Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) This is why my 6th grader will never have her own phone
2) This is why, when she does get a phone in a couple of years -- maybe -- I will always have the password and have access to it. It will not be "her phone." It will be my phone that I am generous enough to let her use on occasion, when she demonstrates the maturity required to have one.
Isn't that a bit of a catch-22? How will she demonstrate the maturity to have one? Is she generally immature, irresponsible, and untrustworthy in other facets of her life?
I don't care if she's the most mature child on the planet -- 12 is too young to have that much access to a phone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thank you for the input. We do have her in a ton of activities because we like to keep her busy and active. The grandparents accuse us of over-scheduling her, but we think it's good to be busy!
Compared to when I grew up in the late 1970s and 1980's, I feel like there is too much screen time when kids are not kept busy.
Are you kidding me? The only difference between now and then is back then everyone stared at the SAME screen.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thank you for the input. We do have her in a ton of activities because we like to keep her busy and active. The grandparents accuse us of over-scheduling her, but we think it's good to be busy!
Compared to when I grew up in the late 1970s and 1980's, I feel like there is too much screen time when kids are not kept busy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) This is why my 6th grader will never have her own phone
2) This is why, when she does get a phone in a couple of years -- maybe -- I will always have the password and have access to it. It will not be "her phone." It will be my phone that I am generous enough to let her use on occasion, when she demonstrates the maturity required to have one.
Isn't that a bit of a catch-22? How will she demonstrate the maturity to have one? Is she generally immature, irresponsible, and untrustworthy in other facets of her life?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to know the pwd on the phone now. That's crazy.
I agree but your narrow view of this is what's really crazy.
Its not about controlling a 12 year old. Its about having a close relationship where she can come to you and tell you about this boy she likes. Where you can have frank and explicit discussions about the physical and emotional consequences of sex. Foster a relationship where she feels safe and comfortable enough to tell you about the pressure she feels from peers and possibly/probably from her boyfriend. Talk about birth control. Talk about your values. Meet the boy. Ask if his parents know. Ask if any of her friends have boyfriends. But don't treat this like the Spanish Inquisition. (nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition...) It will be awkward, it will be uncomfortable- but start this lifelong conversation with your daughter now. Simply forbidding it and pretending this part of her life doesn't exist is a recipe for disaster. You cannot simply WISH this away.
That password is pretty low on the list of things OP needs to focus on.
Anonymous wrote:You need to know the pwd on the phone now. That's crazy.
Anonymous wrote:1) This is why my 6th grader will never have her own phone
2) This is why, when she does get a phone in a couple of years -- maybe -- I will always have the password and have access to it. It will not be "her phone." It will be my phone that I am generous enough to let her use on occasion, when she demonstrates the maturity required to have one.
Anonymous wrote:1) This is why my 6th grader will never have her own phone
2) This is why, when she does get a phone in a couple of years -- maybe -- I will always have the password and have access to it. It will not be "her phone." It will be my phone that I am generous enough to let her use on occasion, when she demonstrates the maturity required to have one.
Anonymous wrote:Our DD is the oldest of our three children, and she attends a middle school in Bethesda. She is a good student and all-around great girl.
She asked me to charge her iPhone the other night. (Yes, we regret getting her one for her 12th birthday a few months ago because now she just wants to text her friends constantly and I think she's almost over-communicating with them.) She has a password for her iPhone, and I don't have access to it. (We probably need to supervise that more.)
When I charged her iPhone, a text came up from a boy that said "Love you. Good night." It was from a 6th grade boy at her school. She met him at the beginning of the school year, and I noticed she hangs out in groups that occasionally include him. He seems like a nice boy.
I think 6th grade is way too young to be receiving a text from a boy that says "Love you. Good night." I remember being a 6th grader, and some of the boys were already going way beyond kissing with girls in my school.
I welcome any advice other parents may have! Thank you!