Anonymous wrote:Yup. As much as she freaking wants. If she wants to watch Cocomelon for hour-long stretches, we go for it. I actually find that by letting it run ad nauseum she gets bored and wanders away to do her own thing surprisingly quickly anyway so it's not hours of slack-jawed staring, although she notices right away if it gets turned off, ha. So, I've been mentally singing this insane song about "dinosaur rulers" jump, jiving, and wailing for the past week and a half. So it goes.
Anonymous wrote:DS is a new 2, and we never allowed screens before this save video calls with out of state grandparents and aunts. Now, he does circle time at daycare for 30 minutes a day with his classmates, and yoga once a week for an hour on Zoom. With me wfh, he also watches Word Party on Netflix whenever I have an important meeting or project I need him to be quiet for, which averages about an hour or so each day.
This is awful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. I'm hoping but not allowing screens he'll have an advantage in getting into harvard over all kids whose parents aren't holding the line and allowing screens. Their brains will be scrambled mush while his will still be pristine. He was average at best before but I really think this will change his trajectory vs the competition.
(i kid...we're definitely doing a lot of screes).
My sibling was raised by the tv. Went to Harvard and became an early employee of Netflix.
The vast majority of "us" got a ton of screen time as kids, so unless Harvard pretty much only ever admitted screen-free kids, a lot of Harvard grads were heavy screen-users as kids. Thus...?
+1. I went to any Ivy for undergrad and grad school, and I used to watch tv for 8 hours a day on weekends while my exhausted immigrant parents caught up on sleep and all the errands they couldn't finish during the week. I don't know why people around here demonize screens so much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. I'm hoping but not allowing screens he'll have an advantage in getting into harvard over all kids whose parents aren't holding the line and allowing screens. Their brains will be scrambled mush while his will still be pristine. He was average at best before but I really think this will change his trajectory vs the competition.
(i kid...we're definitely doing a lot of screes).
My sibling was raised by the tv. Went to Harvard and became an early employee of Netflix.
The vast majority of "us" got a ton of screen time as kids, so unless Harvard pretty much only ever admitted screen-free kids, a lot of Harvard grads were heavy screen-users as kids. Thus...?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. I'm hoping but not allowing screens he'll have an advantage in getting into harvard over all kids whose parents aren't holding the line and allowing screens. Their brains will be scrambled mush while his will still be pristine. He was average at best before but I really think this will change his trajectory vs the competition.
(i kid...we're definitely doing a lot of screes).
My sibling was raised by the tv. Went to Harvard and became an early employee of Netflix.
The vast majority of "us" got a ton of screen time as kids, so unless Harvard pretty much only ever admitted screen-free kids, a lot of Harvard grads were heavy screen-users as kids. Thus...?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. I'm hoping but not allowing screens he'll have an advantage in getting into harvard over all kids whose parents aren't holding the line and allowing screens. Their brains will be scrambled mush while his will still be pristine. He was average at best before but I really think this will change his trajectory vs the competition.
(i kid...we're definitely doing a lot of screes).
My sibling was raised by the tv. Went to Harvard and became an early employee of Netflix.
Anonymous wrote:No. I'm hoping but not allowing screens he'll have an advantage in getting into harvard over all kids whose parents aren't holding the line and allowing screens. Their brains will be scrambled mush while his will still be pristine. He was average at best before but I really think this will change his trajectory vs the competition.
(i kid...we're definitely doing a lot of screes).
Anonymous wrote:DS is a new 2, and we never allowed screens before this save video calls with out of state grandparents and aunts. Now, he does circle time at daycare for 30 minutes a day with his classmates, and yoga once a week for an hour on Zoom. With me wfh, he also watches Word Party on Netflix whenever I have an important meeting or project I need him to be quiet for, which averages about an hour or so each day.
This is awful.