Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't want your kid on my child's phone. Get your own. If your child breaks mine, they who pays for it? Use common sense. Supervise them and monitor what is on the phone. Kids are on instagram as parents don't care or aren't supervising.
You are a mean, mean person. Shit happens. My daughter's cell phone broke when she handed it to a friend to look at something on her screen and the friend dropped it. The other girl DID have her own phone. If it breaks, it breaks.
The other parents said they would replace DD's phone. I told them that was very kind of them but it was too expensive, and I'd go halfsies with them. DD's friend wrote DD a note saying she would pay for a third since it was really her fault. It's three years later now, and the girls are still friends.
Shit happens so no, I don't want your kid on my phone so they can break it. I don't even get how it breaks. We've had phones and iPads for years and not one broke but we have proper cases. Its one thing if it were an emergency but just to call and say something to a parent - no. Get a cheap trac phone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't want your kid on my child's phone. Get your own. If your child breaks mine, they who pays for it? Use common sense. Supervise them and monitor what is on the phone. Kids are on instagram as parents don't care or aren't supervising.
You are a mean, mean person. Shit happens. My daughter's cell phone broke when she handed it to a friend to look at something on her screen and the friend dropped it. The other girl DID have her own phone. If it breaks, it breaks.
The other parents said they would replace DD's phone. I told them that was very kind of them but it was too expensive, and I'd go halfsies with them. DD's friend wrote DD a note saying she would pay for a third since it was really her fault. It's three years later now, and the girls are still friends.
Anonymous wrote:I don't want your kid on my child's phone. Get your own. If your child breaks mine, they who pays for it? Use common sense. Supervise them and monitor what is on the phone. Kids are on instagram as parents don't care or aren't supervising.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You know they can also just use their friends phones for social media and lie to you and because its not your phone you have no control.
But they'll do this anyway. If a parent gets a phone and limits social media the kid will use a friend's phone.
Are you saying this is hopeless? Perhaps we should just give up and let the kids use whatever they want because they'll find a way to do it anyway?
At least if I don't get the phone, they won't have it during all the hours they're in my house.
No, I'm saying you teach them proper use, you put restrictions on the phone, limit access to the internet and app store, etc. You have all text go to your phone or your iPad, etc. They don't have to have it all the time at home, it can stay on the counter or by the door charging except when you give permission. Parent. Pushing off what is going to happen anyway or they will sneak around you isn't going to help as much as you think. My kids know if they go on social media or something I don't approve of and find out they lose their phones. Simple. You keep their account passwords, and if they refuse, they lose the phone. You are on their friends list and if not they lose the phone.
But why do I need to get them a phone at all at this age?
Anonymous wrote:Both our kids got their first phones in Dec of 7th grade. The delay had no ill effects. Neither kid uses any social media or seemed inclined to binge on screen time after finally getting phones.