Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would never give a young child free access to a computer, email, phone. Nor would I allow them to go to the park or anywhere alone. I'd expect the parent to contact me to make arrangements and someone supervise (and if you don't supervise and dump it on me, I will only agree so many times). I also don't appreciate kids constantly knocking on my door demanding they be allowed to come in and play and I have to feed them if I wasn't planning on cooking. If you want your kids to play, you invite the kids over.
For teens, its a mix but usually like PP said there is not a lot of time with activities and we have to drive.
This seems like a recipe for socially and emotionally stunted kids. Let kids live a little, they will be fine.
Anonymous wrote:I would never give a young child free access to a computer, email, phone. Nor would I allow them to go to the park or anywhere alone. I'd expect the parent to contact me to make arrangements and someone supervise (and if you don't supervise and dump it on me, I will only agree so many times). I also don't appreciate kids constantly knocking on my door demanding they be allowed to come in and play and I have to feed them if I wasn't planning on cooking. If you want your kids to play, you invite the kids over.
For teens, its a mix but usually like PP said there is not a lot of time with activities and we have to drive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It came in 6th grade for both of my kids.
How, logistically? Do they and their friends have phones? Email or online messaging apps using a family computer?
Anonymous wrote:When. I was a kid, if I wanted to see a friend, I picked up the family landline and called their family landline, minimal to no grown ups involved. I want that for my kid (8 years old) but that seems unnecessarily complicated. None of their friends have phones, so even if I gave them one it would not solve the problem (and would also create new problems). It doesn't really work to have them just plan at school, because they might not know ahead of time exactly when they will be free and it has proved difficult for them to coordinate meeting at the park at particular times without involving parents. Plus it of course doesn't work during summer.
Do your 8 year olds have email accounts they can access on a family computer? Walkie talkies that go all the way to friends houses? A culture where they walk to friends houses and knock on the door unannounced? Other ideas?
I don't really want to introduce the same dynamic of group text messages and so forth --I just want to empower them to plan to meet their friends at the park or invite them over without having to ask me to ask the friends' parents, which creates friction and a feeling of being un-empowered and dependent. Any advice?
Anonymous wrote:I would never give a young child free access to a computer, email, phone. Nor would I allow them to go to the park or anywhere alone. I'd expect the parent to contact me to make arrangements and someone supervise (and if you don't supervise and dump it on me, I will only agree so many times). I also don't appreciate kids constantly knocking on my door demanding they be allowed to come in and play and I have to feed them if I wasn't planning on cooking. If you want your kids to play, you invite the kids over.
For teens, its a mix but usually like PP said there is not a lot of time with activities and we have to drive.