Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is an invasion of her privacy. Just as ignominious as reading her diary.
Not OP here but as a condition of getting the phone the kids were told I would be checking. They can absolutely 100% return their iPhone to me and have all the privacy they desire.
What you do is called "consistent" and there's no presumption of privacy so no invasion. This OP's child "has no idea." That's the invasion.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, I read all the texts and that was a condition of her getting a device.
When we were kids, our parents knew who called because there was one house phone, period. My kid is 12, not practically in college, so I don't see this as a problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is an invasion of her privacy. Just as ignominious as reading her diary.
Not OP here but as a condition of getting the phone the kids were told I would be checking. They can absolutely 100% return their iPhone to me and have all the privacy they desire.
What you do is called "consistent" and there's no presumption of privacy so no invasion. This OP's child "has no idea." That's the invasion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is an invasion of her privacy. Just as ignominious as reading her diary.
Not OP here but as a condition of getting the phone the kids were told I would be checking. They can absolutely 100% return their iPhone to me and have all the privacy they desire.
Anonymous wrote:This is an invasion of her privacy. Just as ignominious as reading her diary.
Anonymous wrote:Mine, too, can't stand the F word or other rude gestures. She's not a prude, but knows it's trashy to do those things. Just because many kids are doing that doesn't make it okay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why does a 6th grader need a phone?
Actually she has an iPod touch which is what she's texting on. But she has a phone for taking mass transit to and from school by herself.
Can I sidetrack to ask how this happens with out a cell phone #? Let me guess: there's an app for that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is an invasion of her privacy. Just as ignominious as reading her diary.
This I disagree with. Parents should be seeing to it that their kids are safe, and if this means looking at their texts, I think it's fine. She is twelve, so a long way from being an adult whose judgment should be more trustworthy. What I don't understand is why these kids are doing so much texting anyway. Don't they have anything more productive to do? Why do they need Ipods AND phones? I guess OP lives in DC and her daughter takes metro or something. My kids take a bus and they don't need their own phone, nor does the school allow them to have it. To take a phone to school in our county, parents have to apply for permission.
Anonymous wrote:This is an invasion of her privacy. Just as ignominious as reading her diary.
Anonymous wrote:This is an invasion of her privacy. Just as ignominious as reading her diary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sure you will dismiss me, but she is entering an age when she will care more about privacy and being treated as a separate individual from you. Ignore this at your peril.
You didn't tell me anything I don't already know. She has no idea I looked at her iPod.
I would consider this a betrayal of trust, both as a parent and as a former 12-year-old -- unless you explicitly told her when she got her iPod that you reserve the right to look at any of her texts any time without telling her.