Anonymous wrote:![]()
Hasn't technology reached the point where kids should be able to browse the web and make telephone calls from their $200 basketball sneakers?
Anonymous wrote:Considering, I don't have a top of the line smartphone, my child won't either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The expectation of at least having a smartphone starts in 6th grade.
Having a nice smartphone doesn't really kick in until age 13/14. And even then, I've not heard stories from my kids of peers being bullied or made fun of for not having the best phone.
I know that some kids make money selling their older iPhones at school once they get a newer model. It's something about how Instagram on an Android is crappy? Or maybe it's Snapchat? I just know that one of those apps doesn't work as well on an Android.
My neighbor's son traded his Samsung Galaxy S7 for an iPhone 5c. She was irate because he didn't understand he was trading a 2016 model phone for one released in 2013. "But it's an iPhone, mom" was all he kept telling her. His bad trade is kind of a running joke in our friend group now. When we had our neighborhood Halloween party on Saturday, another neighbor said, "Hey James, I'll trade you my half eaten cookie for your uneaten cookie that just came out of the oven." The kid gets upset because he still insists that he made a good trade. After all, it's an iPhone!
Sorry, I agree with him. And I hope an adult nipped the teasing in the bud at the neighborhood party. How awful for this kid.
I don't suppose I explained it well, but it's in jest. He understands that it's not a hurtful teasing.
I, too, think that it was a pretty good trade, but then I'm an Apple fan and can't imagine going back to an Android.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The expectation of at least having a smartphone starts in 6th grade.
Having a nice smartphone doesn't really kick in until age 13/14. And even then, I've not heard stories from my kids of peers being bullied or made fun of for not having the best phone.
I know that some kids make money selling their older iPhones at school once they get a newer model. It's something about how Instagram on an Android is crappy? Or maybe it's Snapchat? I just know that one of those apps doesn't work as well on an Android.
My neighbor's son traded his Samsung Galaxy S7 for an iPhone 5c. She was irate because he didn't understand he was trading a 2016 model phone for one released in 2013. "But it's an iPhone, mom" was all he kept telling her. His bad trade is kind of a running joke in our friend group now. When we had our neighborhood Halloween party on Saturday, another neighbor said, "Hey James, I'll trade you my half eaten cookie for your uneaten cookie that just came out of the oven." The kid gets upset because he still insists that he made a good trade. After all, it's an iPhone!
Sorry, I agree with him. And I hope an adult nipped the teasing in the bud at the neighborhood party. How awful for this kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a pp stated, it does depend on where you live, and this is one of the reasons why we chose not to live in a very wealthy area. Having stated that, DC got a motorola not-a-top-of-the-line-smartphone with no data plan in 6th grade, but DC paid for half of the cost with DC's saved up bday/xmas money. We were planning to get DC a dumbphone. We got DC the phone to contact us and vice versa, and not for data. Unlimited text comes with the call plan.
However, DC pays for the data plan with DC's allowance, which ends up being all of it for the month. The plan does gives credit for data not used for the month. This makes DC very careful about data usage outside our wireless range. Most of the time, DC gets some money back.
Actually it doesn't. We live in Bethesda among 2 million dollar homes where teens drive the latest SUV, and my son has never received comments about his lack of phone.
I posted earlier at 09:31.
What matters is your child's social group and how they act, and whether they are thrown together with nothing to do but start behaving nastily. My friend's daughter who was teased for her lack of data plan is stuck on the schoolbus for an hour with kids with nothing better to do - kids who in different circumstances would not have thought of being so rude.
Bullying can happen anytime, anywhere. Our children need to have a few responses pat, and know how to choose their friends.
Anonymous wrote:The expectation of at least having a smartphone starts in 6th grade.
Having a nice smartphone doesn't really kick in until age 13/14. And even then, I've not heard stories from my kids of peers being bullied or made fun of for not having the best phone.
I know that some kids make money selling their older iPhones at school once they get a newer model. It's something about how Instagram on an Android is crappy? Or maybe it's Snapchat? I just know that one of those apps doesn't work as well on an Android.
My neighbor's son traded his Samsung Galaxy S7 for an iPhone 5c. She was irate because he didn't understand he was trading a 2016 model phone for one released in 2013. "But it's an iPhone, mom" was all he kept telling her. His bad trade is kind of a running joke in our friend group now. When we had our neighborhood Halloween party on Saturday, another neighbor said, "Hey James, I'll trade you my half eaten cookie for your uneaten cookie that just came out of the oven." The kid gets upset because he still insists that he made a good trade. After all, it's an iPhone!
Anonymous wrote:As a pp stated, it does depend on where you live, and this is one of the reasons why we chose not to live in a very wealthy area. Having stated that, DC got a motorola not-a-top-of-the-line-smartphone with no data plan in 6th grade, but DC paid for half of the cost with DC's saved up bday/xmas money. We were planning to get DC a dumbphone. We got DC the phone to contact us and vice versa, and not for data. Unlimited text comes with the call plan.
However, DC pays for the data plan with DC's allowance, which ends up being all of it for the month. The plan does gives credit for data not used for the month. This makes DC very careful about data usage outside our wireless range. Most of the time, DC gets some money back.