Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FWIW, my DD is a freshman and reports all the girls at her school whose parents don’t allow social media have Snapchat at the least. Some also have Instagram and/or Tic Tok. They set them up on friends devices and just don’t log in on their own phones. They can check Snapchat at school a few different ways.
This doesn't seem so bad to me because presumably it's much more limited than having full access at home.
Most just use old iPhones on wifi at home. Either find one st home or teens sell these burner phones at school for like $25. I see a lot of trade offs.
- teacher
Anonymous wrote:The fear of TT on here is so insane. Have any of you who think it is a Chinese mind control app that steals your personal info ever used the app?
Crazy restrictive parenting is so ineffective. I simply don't get it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FWIW, my DD is a freshman and reports all the girls at her school whose parents don’t allow social media have Snapchat at the least. Some also have Instagram and/or Tic Tok. They set them up on friends devices and just don’t log in on their own phones. They can check Snapchat at school a few different ways.
This doesn't seem so bad to me because presumably it's much more limited than having full access at home.
Anonymous wrote:Community college and live at home. Phone is in the kitchen as soon as they get home.
Anonymous wrote:FWIW, my DD is a freshman and reports all the girls at her school whose parents don’t allow social media have Snapchat at the least. Some also have Instagram and/or Tic Tok. They set them up on friends devices and just don’t log in on their own phones. They can check Snapchat at school a few different ways.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would love to see how parents are restricting anything their kids are doing in college. But then again, I've seen this helicopter parent facebook groups.
They are going to freak out when they learn they can't access their kids' medical records once they turn 18.
Anonymous wrote:I would love to see how parents are restricting anything their kids are doing in college. But then again, I've seen this helicopter parent facebook groups.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know times have changed a little, but I have 2 college students and by the time they reached high school, I did not restrict social media except to have time/room limits to their phones (plug phones in downstairs before bed).
They are both well adjusted college students that do not abuse their phones.
But there was a several month phase where one of my kids really went crazy on fortnight - playing way too much but he ended up self regulating and now is much more controlled. My strategy is let them learn to self-regulate but I get that is different from what others like and are comfortable doing.
Wait - you just gave them tiktok, insta, etc throughout high school ??
OMG
PP here - not sure if the OMG is real or not. I don't think tik tok was a thing when my kids started high school (they are 22 and 20) and yes, they did have instagram in high school. I followed their accounts and we were open about issues and problems and my kids talk to me, but yes, they were allowed social media in high school and now they are adjusted college students. I do think it's a little different now - there wasn't really youtube and scrolling the way there is now, but instagram actually seems kind of tame and the kids turned out all right....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know times have changed a little, but I have 2 college students and by the time they reached high school, I did not restrict social media except to have time/room limits to their phones (plug phones in downstairs before bed).
They are both well adjusted college students that do not abuse their phones.
But there was a several month phase where one of my kids really went crazy on fortnight - playing way too much but he ended up self regulating and now is much more controlled. My strategy is let them learn to self-regulate but I get that is different from what others like and are comfortable doing.
Wait - you just gave them tiktok, insta, etc throughout high school ??
OMG
PP here - not sure if the OMG is real or not. I don't think tik tok was a thing when my kids started high school (they are 22 and 20) and yes, they did have instagram in high school. I followed their accounts and we were open about issues and problems and my kids talk to me, but yes, they were allowed social media in high school and now they are adjusted college students. I do think it's a little different now - there wasn't really youtube and scrolling the way there is now, but instagram actually seems kind of tame and the kids turned out all right....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know times have changed a little, but I have 2 college students and by the time they reached high school, I did not restrict social media except to have time/room limits to their phones (plug phones in downstairs before bed).
They are both well adjusted college students that do not abuse their phones.
But there was a several month phase where one of my kids really went crazy on fortnight - playing way too much but he ended up self regulating and now is much more controlled. My strategy is let them learn to self-regulate but I get that is different from what others like and are comfortable doing.
Wait - you just gave them tiktok, insta, etc throughout high school ??
OMG