Anonymous wrote:This is OP, thanks for the feedback. My child has been reporting that several friends have them. One does have divorced parents and one an older sibling who has one (I think sibling is in 5th). I want to hold off on this as long as possible!
Anonymous wrote:Whatever age you are OK with a phone, add a couple years.
Anonymous wrote:The people on this thread who think iPhones are somehow not as bad as Apple Watches are out of their minds. Apple Watches make it very difficult to access social media at the best of times (videos are close to unviewable) and can be easily locked down because the workaround browsers don't work on them. Texting is possible, but a pain to do for long chains/convos. You can treat the watch like a phone in terms of putting it away at night. Basically Apple Watch >>>> iPhone for a kid.
I got my kids Gizmos for logistics in 4th grade and we will let them upgrade to Apple Watches in 6th (middle school) for the maps, Apple wallet and compatibility with non-Gizmos functions. iPhones likely in 8th so we get a year of close supervision before HS, but not 100% sure on that yet.
Thankfully, most schools are now taking watches and phones during the day.
Anonymous wrote:what's the best way to lock them down so they become limited to only receive and call a few numbers and no internet? My mother can't figure out her new series 11 and gave it to me, and I want my kid to be able to reach me, but I want it very basic
Anonymous wrote:My DD is in third grade and has been asking for an Apple watch. That feels very young to me but looking for a gut check.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I despise them, as I've seen lots of examples of kids constantly distracted by incoming texts. This is outside of school, but I've heard from my kids that the watches are not really locked down.
We did phones in 7th for my older two, which were easy to put in a drawer, not attached to their bodies, and easy to lock down. For my youngest who will want more freedom earlier, I'm considering a flip phone in 5th grade. Then he could text me when going to friends' houses or other places
You can set downtown on it and they can’t get any texts except from who you choose. I don’t understand why people are saying it’s hard to lock down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I despise them, as I've seen lots of examples of kids constantly distracted by incoming texts. This is outside of school, but I've heard from my kids that the watches are not really locked down.
We did phones in 7th for my older two, which were easy to put in a drawer, not attached to their bodies, and easy to lock down. For my youngest who will want more freedom earlier, I'm considering a flip phone in 5th grade. Then he could text me when going to friends' houses or other places
You can set downtown on it and they can’t get any texts except from who you choose. I don’t understand why people are saying it’s hard to lock down.
Anonymous wrote:I despise them, as I've seen lots of examples of kids constantly distracted by incoming texts. This is outside of school, but I've heard from my kids that the watches are not really locked down.
We did phones in 7th for my older two, which were easy to put in a drawer, not attached to their bodies, and easy to lock down. For my youngest who will want more freedom earlier, I'm considering a flip phone in 5th grade. Then he could text me when going to friends' houses or other places