Anonymous wrote:I can't believe with all the data and social science we have in front of us now people are still considering and defending getting kids this young phones.
Anonymous wrote:I have a 13yo DD and we got her a phone the summer before MS.
No regrets in 6th grade at all. I like that u csn track where she is, allows me to give her more freedom.
The struggle i’m having now is that I occasionally check her texts, ( she doesn’t know) and I’m seeing things that concern me. She told several friends in the last few weeks she has a boyfriend which she doesn’t. Made up situations with non existant boyfriend to tell friends.
Today a friend sent her a video of herself vaping , she stole it from her dad, and my kid is saying “ save some for me”
She’s a good kid so I’m not sure where this is coming from
I’ve decided tomorrow morning I’m gonna spot check her phone and we’re gonna have a big come to Jesus conversation.
If there was no phone this wouldn’t be happening.
It’s a trade off for the benefits though….. sigh
Anonymous wrote:I can't believe with all the data and social science we have in front of us now people are still considering and defending getting kids this young phones.
Anonymous wrote:Towards the end of the second page and no one who meets the title criteria (regrets getting their 12/13 year old a phone) has replied.
Anonymous wrote:I have a 13yo DD and we got her a phone the summer before MS.
No regrets in 6th grade at all. I like that u csn track where she is, allows me to give her more freedom.
The struggle i’m having now is that I occasionally check her texts, ( she doesn’t know) and I’m seeing things that concern me. She told several friends in the last few weeks she has a boyfriend which she doesn’t. Made up situations with non existant boyfriend to tell friends.
Today a friend sent her a video of herself vaping , she stole it from her dad, and my kid is saying “ save some for me”
She’s a good kid so I’m not sure where this is coming from
I’ve decided tomorrow morning I’m gonna spot check her phone and we’re gonna have a big come to Jesus conversation.
If there was no phone this wouldn’t be happening.
It’s a trade off for the benefits though….. sigh
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had a 12-year-old boy on a bike stop me on the street because he was lost (we live in a super safe community) and he wanted to call his mom. He asked if he could use my phone and of course I said yes, then waited with him while his mom drove to pick him up.
I thought it was so cool that this kid didn’t have a phone but felt empowered to approach a safe-looking stranger and problem-solve. So many kids are terrified of talking to strangers, don’t know how to judge “safe” from “unsafe” or sketchy looking, and wouldn’t have a clue how to get out of a jam without a personal cell phone.
Sharing as I think this is an unconventional reason to not get a phone too early. This kid was able to have a really nice conversation with me while we waited and was super polite and thankful. Those are the skills that kids should be developing.
Not all strangers are good people. He got lucky.
Anonymous wrote:I had a 12-year-old boy on a bike stop me on the street because he was lost (we live in a super safe community) and he wanted to call his mom. He asked if he could use my phone and of course I said yes, then waited with him while his mom drove to pick him up.
I thought it was so cool that this kid didn’t have a phone but felt empowered to approach a safe-looking stranger and problem-solve. So many kids are terrified of talking to strangers, don’t know how to judge “safe” from “unsafe” or sketchy looking, and wouldn’t have a clue how to get out of a jam without a personal cell phone.
Sharing as I think this is an unconventional reason to not get a phone too early. This kid was able to have a really nice conversation with me while we waited and was super polite and thankful. Those are the skills that kids should be developing.