Anonymous wrote:I don’t consider YouTube to be social media. There is much sharper divide between content creators and the audience.
Anonymous wrote:I’m not clear how your friend thinks they are equipping their children with skills to navigate the world.
Anonymous wrote:I think if they aren't interested it is possible. I know some young people who don't bother. But if they are curious they have friends who can show them their accounts/activities, and I mean cmon, kids will find a way to circumvent the rules if they are motivated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is she including LinkedIn? What if the child wants an internship or mentoring in HS? Is she extending this to any form of virtual interaction— like online classes, MS teams, Dropbox etc? Does she realize that adults need to interact with other adults online and in person in today’s world?
OP here. She didn’t really seem to welcome follow up questions to her very firm stance. It was clear she did not want to be challenged on her views. She also seems to think by sending her kids to private school (large mainstream parochial Catholic) this will somehow insulate them. Like Catholic school teens don’t go on TikTok or something. Arguing would have been pointless and caused a riff.
Anonymous wrote:Of course it’s possible, many people do this every day
Anonymous wrote:Mine don’t use social media. They use educational resources and apps but never social media. It’s not necessary and works quite well for us. I don’t judge people that use it though. I know many families that don’t and some that do.