Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am surprised by the amount of supervision other posters have in mind. I would exchange cell numbers, plant myself in a couple places and let them know where I am at the time, meet up for lunch, and turn them loose. A place like Hershey is family friendly and all the rides should be enough to keep them from
doing something really silly.
This right here is why I will not allow my kids to go on trips unless I know what kind of parent the chaperone is.
Not the PP but that's why my kids go on events like this, I make sure they don't invite the kids who have helicopter parents.
Did you have a parent planted on your ass when you were 12yrs old is the world just "so dangerous" these days?
The OP said it was 5th graders. My daughter in 5th grade is 10, not 12 and would want the supervision level being discussed. And, I'm by no means a helicopter parent.
I agree with this. My son is 10 and would FREAK OUT if he got separated from a buddy, and there was no chaperone in sight. His sense of direction isn't good, particularly in unfamiliar places.
Middle school would be entirely different. We went unsupervised in 8th grade, only meeting back at lunch and at pick-up time. Nobody got lost.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most 5th grade boys are either 11 and some even 12yrs old.
Even still, a group of 10yr olds can navigate an amusement park. That is what maps and employees are for.
If an 8yr old can be a latchkey kid, than a group 2-3yrs older can be on there own for short amount of times with meet-up areas in a park. What do you all think will happen? They will get grabbed and thrown in a bathroom and raped? By this age I was gone all day in the woods, baseball field, park, playing games in the street and bicycling for miles. I bet you all were too. And your parents had no clue where you were as long as you were home for dinner.
You all seriously need to give your kids some breathing room to LEARN to be on their own, navigate, use common sense and acquire some street smarts.
Following their every move with water, snacks, and first aid kits is insane. Sorry. Time to stop hovering.
In what country are fifth graders 12 unless they failed a grade?
Anonymous wrote:Most 5th grade boys are either 11 and some even 12yrs old.
Even still, a group of 10yr olds can navigate an amusement park. That is what maps and employees are for.
If an 8yr old can be a latchkey kid, than a group 2-3yrs older can be on there own for short amount of times with meet-up areas in a park. What do you all think will happen? They will get grabbed and thrown in a bathroom and raped? By this age I was gone all day in the woods, baseball field, park, playing games in the street and bicycling for miles. I bet you all were too. And your parents had no clue where you were as long as you were home for dinner.
You all seriously need to give your kids some breathing room to LEARN to be on their own, navigate, use common sense and acquire some street smarts.
Following their every move with water, snacks, and first aid kits is insane. Sorry. Time to stop hovering.
Anonymous wrote:Most 5th grade boys are either 11 and some even 12yrs old.
Even still, a group of 10yr olds can navigate an amusement park. That is what maps and employees are for.
If an 8yr old can be a latchkey kid, than a group 2-3yrs older can be on there own for short amount of times with meet-up areas in a park. What do you all think will happen? They will get grabbed and thrown in a bathroom and raped? By this age I was gone all day in the woods, baseball field, park, playing games in the street and bicycling for miles. I bet you all were too. And your parents had no clue where you were as long as you were home for dinner.
You all seriously need to give your kids some breathing room to LEARN to be on their own, navigate, use common sense and acquire some street smarts.
Following their every move with water, snacks, and first aid kits is insane. Sorry. Time to stop hovering.