Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And TiK Tok? I also have a young teen begging for these saying they feel socially left out … which I think is true but also their way of trying to build their case for why we should say yes. We’ve held firm at no but are curious like the OP how others are handling this.
I responded that these responses are not typical IRL. Also, my youngest is 14. I can’t think of anyone she knows who hasn’t had TikTok for years. Say no if you want but yes, your kid is socially left out. The strictest parents I know allow it with limits and have for years.
Anonymous wrote:We are a no here too. If enough parents had a spine all of our jobs would be easier.
Anonymous wrote:And TiK Tok? I also have a young teen begging for these saying they feel socially left out … which I think is true but also their way of trying to build their case for why we should say yes. We’ve held firm at no but are curious like the OP how others are handling this.
Anonymous wrote:These responses are not typical IRL. My kids are 14 and 17. 14 yo uses Snapchat. 17 yo doesn’t by choice. My youngest got it a couple of years ago with restrictions with encouragement from my oldest after he showed me it’s just another form of texting and how you can turn off a lot of features parents are so scared about. I’ve always told my kids to keep their locations off and set setting to private or contacts only (or whatever it’s called on snap). It is truly how they communicate with others in middle school.
Anonymous wrote:These responses are not typical IRL. My kids are 14 and 17. 14 yo uses Snapchat. 17 yo doesn’t by choice. My youngest got it a couple of years ago with restrictions with encouragement from my oldest after he showed me it’s just another form of texting and how you can turn off a lot of features parents are so scared about. I’ve always told my kids to keep their locations off and set setting to private or contacts only (or whatever it’s called on snap). It is truly how they communicate with others in middle school.
Anonymous wrote:My kid got it going into 8th grade and it hasn't been a big deal. I think it depends on your kid. My older teen is a boy and just really not prone to drama at all. I did require he can't share his location. He is not the type to care though if "everyone else" is somewhere and he isn't.
My experience in middle school was kids get on snapchat without telling their parents. Burner phones, accounts on their friends' phones, etc. This was not infrequent I heard this. I had parents telling me their kid wasn't on it and then my kid would show me the kid had an active account. Our thinking was we would rather have him have it and us talk about it and us be able to provide some guidance.
Anonymous wrote:And TiK Tok? I also have a young teen begging for these saying they feel socially left out … which I think is true but also their way of trying to build their case for why we should say yes. We’ve held firm at no but are curious like the OP how others are handling this.