Anonymous wrote:At 10 I was taking the public bus in DC and had to be aware of the time to the minute to make my transfer. I can't believe how many parents are saying keeping track of time is too much to ask. I'm so incredibly worried about this generation. I went to a pool party yesterday and several parents commented on how "confident in the water" my kids were. Um, they are 6 and 7 and have been swimming like that for 4 years. The expectations seem pretty low nowadays as to most skills. I'm not looking forward to supervising these kids at work in 15 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess my 9 1/2 year-old is in the minority here but he never comes home late. He has a watch and uses it. i would be more than pissed at him if he were late like your son.
Your son is not that exceptional. The difference is that you found a system that works for your son and OP hasn't. The watch doesn't work for my son, but we have a system that does and he's never been late either. The point is that we have to teach our kids before we can just expect them to be successful.
Anonymous wrote:He misses lunch, haircut, or whatever else was planned during the time he didn't come home.Anonymous wrote:My 10 yr old son is never home on time. For instance, he went to play at friends down the street- I told him be home by 12:30 to eat lunch and get to 1:30 hair cut... Finally at 1, i drive around to friends to find him. We bought him watch,etc. I get so frustrated. I told him from now on if we have any activity planned, he can't play those days because he can't be responsible and come home on time. I'm also thinking instead of saying for every 5 or 10 minutes he's late, he's grounded 1 hour.
Any thoughts or help on how to get him to be responsible?