Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have to begin allowing your teen to regulate their own sleep patterns. If she doesn't get enough sleep on a school night at age 14+, let her learn from it before she goes to college in a few years. You can suggest she get some sleep, but enforcing a bedtime for a 15-year-old is something no parent should be doing anymore. Do you cut her meat, too?
Sure. Because teenagers are so great at regulating themselves and making decisions that put their health over their immediate desires. And kids who don't have enough sleep are even better at that regulating.![]()
Your comparison to helping her get enough sleep to cutting food is ridiculous. Why didn't you suggest that she drink alcohol and try drugs? After all, she'll need to learn how to deal with those things at college. At 14, it's better that she knows how to handle them, right?
How old are your teenagers? Or do you even have kids?
+10000. I want these "well, they'll learn their lesson if they're tired in the morning!" people to come hang out in my first period class.
-high school teacher
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have to begin allowing your teen to regulate their own sleep patterns. If she doesn't get enough sleep on a school night at age 14+, let her learn from it before she goes to college in a few years. You can suggest she get some sleep, but enforcing a bedtime for a 15-year-old is something no parent should be doing anymore. Do you cut her meat, too?
Honest question: what's the benefit of her having four years to regulate her own schedule before college, over, say, one year? Or one summer? Conversely, why shouldn't 10-year-olds be regulating their own sleep, or 6-year-olds?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have to begin allowing your teen to regulate their own sleep patterns. If she doesn't get enough sleep on a school night at age 14+, let her learn from it before she goes to college in a few years. You can suggest she get some sleep, but enforcing a bedtime for a 15-year-old is something no parent should be doing anymore. Do you cut her meat, too?
Sure. Because teenagers are so great at regulating themselves and making decisions that put their health over their immediate desires. And kids who don't have enough sleep are even better at that regulating.![]()
Your comparison to helping her get enough sleep to cutting food is ridiculous. Why didn't you suggest that she drink alcohol and try drugs? After all, she'll need to learn how to deal with those things at college. At 14, it's better that she knows how to handle them, right?
How old are your teenagers? Or do you even have kids?
Anonymous wrote:I'd have eased her backwards by an hour each night, rather than have her come home and force her backwards by six hours.
I'd tell her I don't care what her cousins do - I care what she does. And I'd reach out to her closest friends' parents and say "Hey, Leah told me all the kids start texting each other after 10pm, but just wanted to let you know, Leah's phone is taken away for the evening at 10pm so she won't be replying until the next day."
Anonymous wrote:^ this is one of those things that is taught young. Families that develop strong bedtime routines throughout early childhood tend to have teens that continue as they age. Families where there is little structure and kids are walking around all hours of the night tend to have teens up on their iPhones all night long.
Anonymous wrote:Is she going to be a freshman in high school?
In my house, we enforced weekday bedtimes until high school.
I have a 14 year old DD who is a rising freshman. Here are our new rules
Screen time and bed times are managed by her - she decides as long as
she does her responsibilities, exercises, does school work, and isn't annoying (must come nicely when called, etc) and gets up on time to do things (no one can sleep until 3 at my house because we have stuff to do), As and Bs in school (since she can do that).
Phone gets plugged in downstairs before she goes to bed - so she can stay up all night texting but when she goes to bed, phone is charged. No phones waking up my kid in the middle of the night. No phones at family dinners, everyone has to do some family time.
she can't bother anyone who goes to sleep before her
I can still take the phone for misbehavior or if she violates above rules
I have been doing this with my older DS since he started high school and it basically works fine and he has learned to be independent. I know he will be ready to manage himself when he goes to college.