Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Phone: middle school
Smart phone: 18 when they pay for it themselves
A smart phone is unfettered access to the internet whether you think you’re savvy or not. Don’t do it.
My son is in high school, and yesterday was his first day (public high school in Northern VA.)
He told me his school is using QR codes for a lot of things--they have to sign in via QR code at their lunch table (I'm assuming for contact tracing.) He only has a fairly simple phone and will have to download an additional app to be able to just eat lunch at his public school cafeteria. I was wondering how they will handle kids who don't have phones/smart phones. FWIW, this is a school that was around 60-70% FARMS in previous year, but this year there has been a boundary change and I'm sure the percentage is even higher.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Phone: middle school
Smart phone: 18 when they pay for it themselves
A smart phone is unfettered access to the internet whether you think you’re savvy or not. Don’t do it.
My son is in high school, and yesterday was his first day (public high school in Northern VA.)
He told me his school is using QR codes for a lot of things--they have to sign in via QR code at their lunch table (I'm assuming for contact tracing.) He only has a fairly simple phone and will have to download an additional app to be able to just eat lunch at his public school cafeteria. I was wondering how they will handle kids who don't have phones/smart phones. FWIW, this is a school that was around 60-70% FARMS in previous year, but this year there has been a boundary change and I'm sure the percentage is even higher.
This is clearly taking away parental rights.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Phone: middle school
Smart phone: 18 when they pay for it themselves
A smart phone is unfettered access to the internet whether you think you’re savvy or not. Don’t do it.
My son is in high school, and yesterday was his first day (public high school in Northern VA.)
He told me his school is using QR codes for a lot of things--they have to sign in via QR code at their lunch table (I'm assuming for contact tracing.) He only has a fairly simple phone and will have to download an additional app to be able to just eat lunch at his public school cafeteria. I was wondering how they will handle kids who don't have phones/smart phones. FWIW, this is a school that was around 60-70% FARMS in previous year, but this year there has been a boundary change and I'm sure the percentage is even higher.
Anonymous wrote:Botht kids they got a flip phone in 6th and a refurbished Iphone 5 in 7th and 8th. They get a new Iphone SE after graduating 8th. DS didn't care but DD was embarrassed at first. She's now in 8th and uses her crappy phone as an excuse not to join social media, which she is desperate to avoid for some reason. Also interestingly, her friends don't tease her about it. COVID has completely changed the MS social dynamic.
Anonymous wrote:Phone: middle school
Smart phone: 18 when they pay for it themselves
A smart phone is unfettered access to the internet whether you think you’re savvy or not. Don’t do it.
Anonymous wrote:at what age to give your kid a phone?
I see so many families give phones really early on (some even in pre-K)
I think it’s not good for child development. Any yes, I can think that, because I’m free to think whatever I want. And I can also make judgments, because I can.
I think maybe, depending on the child middle school/high school is the right time, mostly for check in purposes, but technology addiction is real.
How late is too late so you don’t make your kid an outcast?