Anonymous wrote:Many of us grew up watching TV from the minute we got home until bedtime, with a break for dinner. Looking back, it wasn't great, but we turned out OK. (I mean, we watched Popeye and Roadrunner, and a lot of violent and stupid stuff.) Our kids will be fine if they have attentive parents.
Even a year (or two) of this craziness shouldn't make profound differences in their development. PBS Kids is teaching my boos so much!!!!!
Let's all breath.
Anonymous wrote:So my kids wander around the house watching netflix on their ipad, reading the news and books from the library, and listening to nonstop audiobooks.
On top of that we have a nightly routine of the whole family watching some movie or HGTV or cooking show.
I know they said "let loose of the screens" but I feel like we may be lilting too far off kilter.
But at same token, they aren't watching terrible youtube or tiktok videos, and even the shows run more on the spectrum of Pinkalicious, Property Brothers, and Madame Secretary, so maybe I should be patient with this weird phase.
We don't have a real playable backyard, just a small patio, so they will take their ipads out there and read/watch outside which is nice though I wish they would take a real book or magazine, or just play catch with a baseball.
But I want to cut them off, I want to give them the gift of boredom to spur creativity, but they do all their schoolwork and chores, and I worry taking this away won't spur creativity but instead a general strike and resentment.
How are people managing now that screens are our lives (I mean, I'm working all day on my computer, or grocery shopping, or bill paying, so hard to lead by example).
Anonymous wrote:Most of this sounds fine. It's really better to think about the actual activity they are doing/thing they are accessing (audio books, news, cooking show) rather than dismissing it all because it's "screens". Why would the same activity be better because it's coming from a "real book" rather than an audiobook? It's just a different method of access. As you said it's not the same as awful Tiktok, or YouTube.
Anonymous wrote:Many of us grew up watching TV from the minute we got home until bedtime, with a break for dinner. Looking back, it wasn't great, but we turned out OK. (I mean, we watched Popeye and Roadrunner, and a lot of violent and stupid stuff.) Our kids will be fine if they have attentive parents.
Even a year (or two) of this craziness shouldn't make profound differences in their development. PBS Kids is teaching my boos so much!!!!!
Let's all breath.
Anonymous wrote:Get your spouse on board or it won’t work.
Tell them you’re having different rules for the school year. Maybe things like no screens at meal times, no recreational screens in bedroom.
Replace the tv show with reading stories aloud, board games, puzzles.