Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As I drove my wagon through the farmland to town in 1900, I noticed a 50/50 split of parents who hoed their fields vs those who made their kids do so. Do you hoe your own fields? Why? Are we coddling kids too much?
Let’s be friends.
Anonymous wrote:As I drove from the burbs into DC this morning, I noticed a 50/50 split of parents who carry their kid’s backpack vs those who do not.
Note: these were school-aged kids, not toddlers or preschoolers, and the bags weren’t excessively large.
Do you carry your kid’s backpack? Why?
Are we coddling kids too much?
Anonymous wrote:My kids carry their backpacks starting in K. But sometimes I'll carry it part of the way if it is super heavy (like on library day) because we have a long walk.
This seems like a strange thing to classify as coddling, though. I actually do think parents these days overreach in a lot of ways but this doesn't seem that significant.
Anonymous wrote:As I drove my wagon through the farmland to town in 1900, I noticed a 50/50 split of parents who hoed their fields vs those who made their kids do so. Do you hoe your own fields? Why? Are we coddling kids too much?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have a 15 minute walk and my third grader carries a laptop (mandated by the school) and several textbooks. Also a lunch box and two water bottles. So yes, I sometimes carry the bag for him. It's heavy.
FCPS? Yes, same here except the walk is 20 mins. The bag weighs 23 pounds. I’d like to see OP carry over 1/3 of her weight for 40 mins every day.
And yet so many of us managed to do just that, walking through our friends to and from school every damn day. I guarantee our pile of textbooks weighed more than your kid’s Chromebook.
Oh, and we don’t have “spinal problems” either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. And we’ll reap the consequences.
We already are.
The obsession with wellness was well-intended but it’s gone overboard to the point where kids don’t learn independence and resilience. There is a lot of arrested development out there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have a 15 minute walk and my third grader carries a laptop (mandated by the school) and several textbooks. Also a lunch box and two water bottles. So yes, I sometimes carry the bag for him. It's heavy.
FCPS? Yes, same here except the walk is 20 mins. The bag weighs 23 pounds. I’d like to see OP carry over 1/3 of her weight for 40 mins every day.
And yet so many of us managed to do just that, walking through our friends to and from school every damn day. I guarantee our pile of textbooks weighed more than your kid’s Chromebook.
Oh, and we don’t have “spinal problems” either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have a 15 minute walk and my third grader carries a laptop (mandated by the school) and several textbooks. Also a lunch box and two water bottles. So yes, I sometimes carry the bag for him. It's heavy.
FCPS? Yes, same here except the walk is 20 mins. The bag weighs 23 pounds. I’d like to see OP carry over 1/3 of her weight for 40 mins every day.
Anonymous wrote:As I drove from the burbs into DC this morning, I noticed a 50/50 split of parents who carry their kid’s backpack vs those who do not.
Note: these were school-aged kids, not toddlers or preschoolers, and the bags weren’t excessively large.
Do you carry your kid’s backpack? Why?
Are we coddling kids too much?