Anonymous wrote:When do these kids have free time? My middle schooler gets home around 4. (Or 5 if at sports) and then has at least an hour of homework if not closer to 2, then dinner bath and bed...we are barely squeezing all that in by 8:30. Don't know when she would bake or whatever....
Anonymous wrote:Draw, talk, chores, play with our pets, help cook, read magazines and books. Just like we did when we were kids. Its not easy, but its worth it!
Anonymous wrote:When do these kids have free time? My middle schooler gets home around 4. (Or 5 if at sports) and then has at least an hour of homework if not closer to 2, then dinner bath and bed...we are barely squeezing all that in by 8:30. Don't know when she would bake or whatever....
Anonymous wrote:
Dd gets out at 2 one day a week. Others she's out at 3:30. No more than two hours of homework each day, sometimes less. She showers every other day, which takes ten or fifteen minutes. She goes to bed around 9:30 or 10. We don't eat a formal dinner. I don't even own a table or chairs.

Anonymous wrote:When do these kids have free time? My middle schooler gets home around 4. (Or 5 if at sports) and then has at least an hour of homework if not closer to 2, then dinner bath and bed...we are barely squeezing all that in by 8:30. Don't know when she would bake or whatever....
Anonymous wrote:My DD loves computer programing - Scratch, Minecraft Mods, etc. I don't have a problem with this and many other screen activities.
I'd be more worried about kids not getting this type of practice. Perhaps those of you limiting screen time are allowing this on the weekend?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Exactly, PP. Your son will create things to do that he won't if he can always zone out with tv. My 8th grader is screen free during the week. He winds up reading MAD magazine sometimes, or modifying his air soft rifle motors (every once in a while, we take him to an air soft indoor range. Usually a bunch of 12-19 year old boys in camo there...). My daughter jams on the flute, trying to play Taylor Swift songs. Just cool stuff, advancing their interests, better for their brains than X-Box. Yes, I consider MAD magazine and working on gears for an air-soft rifle, better than looking at a screen.
How can you be so sure? I disagree, actually. I don't see much educational value in a lot of that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Exactly, PP. Your son will create things to do that he won't if he can always zone out with tv. My 8th grader is screen free during the week. He winds up reading MAD magazine sometimes, or modifying his air soft rifle motors (every once in a while, we take him to an air soft indoor range. Usually a bunch of 12-19 year old boys in camo there...). My daughter jams on the flute, trying to play Taylor Swift songs. Just cool stuff, advancing their interests, better for their brains than X-Box. Yes, I consider MAD magazine and working on gears for an air-soft rifle, better than looking at a screen.
How can you be so sure? I disagree, actually. I don't see much educational value in a lot of that.
Anonymous wrote:Read. Listen to music. Stare into space.
Anonymous wrote:what do they do instead (on the nights when they don't have an extra-curricular activity)? If you limit screen time how does this work IRL - i.e. No computer games? No TV? I'm finding the winter to be, as usual, very challenging, and have been letting DS pretty much unrestricted access as long as homework is done, but it does make me uncomfortable.