Anonymous wrote:Mine gets none, but I also WOH. We are both home by 5 latest and dinner on table at 5:30. If one of us is later, toddler goes in high chair and starts dinner while one of us cooks. Can you maybe make enough to have leftovers and try that some nights?
Anonymous wrote:DS said he got 6-12 hours a week of screen time. He said a lot of his classmates got 20+ hours. They are 10.
Anonymous wrote:OP I am 60 and grew up in Minnesota. From the earliest ages I watched a couple hours of TV a day: Romper Room, Captain Kangaroo, cartoons. So did all my friends. Our parents didn't give it a second thought.
It was fine. Today's parents are out of their minds, and raising a generation of kids who can't cope with life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My toddler also watches around an hour or two at night. If not she will expect me to play with her or read to her. She spends around 5 hours at school and no TV in the morning
Your poor kid. We don’t turn the TV on after dinner because we want to play with and read to our kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP I am 60 and grew up in Minnesota. From the earliest ages I watched a couple hours of TV a day: Romper Room, Captain Kangaroo, cartoons. So did all my friends. Our parents didn't give it a second thought.
It was fine. Today's parents are out of their minds, and raising a generation of kids who can't cope with life.
TV shows are so different now then when we were kids. The images flash so much faster. Plus the AAP recommendation is no tv before two.
Plus, how good did we really turn out? I am also 60 and tv shows have never helped me “cope with life”.
That's not true. Daniel Tiger, Tumble Leaf, Sesame Street and others are all very gentle, slow paced, educational, and developed by child education experts. If anything I would guess that tv is better than when you were a kid, not worse.
Sesame Street in particular hasn’t changed much.
Anonymous wrote:My toddler also watches around an hour or two at night. If not she will expect me to play with her or read to her. She spends around 5 hours at school and no TV in the morning
Anonymous wrote:.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP I am 60 and grew up in Minnesota. From the earliest ages I watched a couple hours of TV a day: Romper Room, Captain Kangaroo, cartoons. So did all my friends. Our parents didn't give it a second thought.
It was fine. Today's parents are out of their minds, and raising a generation of kids who can't cope with life.
TV shows are so different now then when we were kids. The images flash so much faster. Plus the AAP recommendation is no tv before two.
Plus, how good did we really turn out? I am also 60 and tv shows have never helped me “cope with life”.
That's not true. Daniel Tiger, Tumble Leaf, Sesame Street and others are all very gentle, slow paced, educational, and developed by child education experts. If anything I would guess that tv is better than when you were a kid, not worse.
.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP I am 60 and grew up in Minnesota. From the earliest ages I watched a couple hours of TV a day: Romper Room, Captain Kangaroo, cartoons. So did all my friends. Our parents didn't give it a second thought.
It was fine. Today's parents are out of their minds, and raising a generation of kids who can't cope with life.
TV shows are so different now then when we were kids. The images flash so much faster. Plus the AAP recommendation is no tv before two.
Plus, how good did we really turn out? I am also 60 and tv shows have never helped me “cope with life”.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old is he?
I’d try to keep it down to strictly an hour or less. I understand as I SAH w a preschooler (4.5) and toddler (2.5) and need the break sometimes too but 2 hours every day seems excessive. My 2 year old no longer naps (?) so tv time is a time for her to get a little rest too.
Why can’t your two year old simply have quiet time reading or playing in her room for an hour? Or a half hour or whatever time works for you.
Anonymous wrote:OP I am 60 and grew up in Minnesota. From the earliest ages I watched a couple hours of TV a day: Romper Room, Captain Kangaroo, cartoons. So did all my friends. Our parents didn't give it a second thought.
It was fine. Today's parents are out of their minds, and raising a generation of kids who can't cope with life.