Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like a lot of parents think they are doing great by not giving their kid a phone, but then give their kid an iPad with group chats. How do we raise the alarm on the group chats? NOTHING good comes out of the group chat.
Good information. We’re not there yet, but thanks for the heads-up.
I really wish the Wait Until 8th Pledge included the concept of ipads/group chats. I've already seen bullying on the group chat in our small school and then the side chats that spin off after the bullying. Please remind your kid that a lot of emotion/feeling/sarcasm gets lost in text. Think of how many times we "misunderstand" each other on dcum - and now imagine you are 11 and just learning how to navigate complex feelings and ranging hormones at the same time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like a lot of parents think they are doing great by not giving their kid a phone, but then give their kid an iPad with group chats. How do we raise the alarm on the group chats? NOTHING good comes out of the group chat.
Good information. We’re not there yet, but thanks for the heads-up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parent of teens here. Our kids' friends mostly got phones in 6th. We waited till 7th but we know families who waited till 9th. Pressure mounts every year. Get together with as many of your kids friends' parents as you can. Make a pact to hold off together.
Meh. This must vary by class. My kids’ K-8 started asking parents to sign the Wait Until 8th pledge a couple of years ago. Almost all of the parents in my daughter’s 5th grade class have signed it. Most 7th graders have phones. I assume their parents think it’s beneficial for the kids to have them at that age.
I'm talking about a group of parents weathering it out together. Not a school form. How many parents do you know who thought it was beneficial back when they bought the phone or introduced the iPad - but they regret it later? I know scores. I know it's annoying when older parents say, "learn from my mistakes." But here we are.
I don’t know how many parents thought it was a mistake—they seemed awfully eager to hand the devices over! It’s been interesting watching it play out. From what I’ve seen, the kids who have smartphones either ignore the people in the room with them or use the phone to post/text/record inappropriate material. I’m not sure what part of that parents were excited about, but nobody forced them to give their kid a phone.
Anonymous wrote:watch is great
Anonymous wrote:it is crazy giving a smart phone to an elementary school student. you're going to destroy their attention spans. and don't complain when they become phone addicts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parent of teens here. Our kids' friends mostly got phones in 6th. We waited till 7th but we know families who waited till 9th. Pressure mounts every year. Get together with as many of your kids friends' parents as you can. Make a pact to hold off together.
Meh. This must vary by class. My kids’ K-8 started asking parents to sign the Wait Until 8th pledge a couple of years ago. Almost all of the parents in my daughter’s 5th grade class have signed it. Most 7th graders have phones. I assume their parents think it’s beneficial for the kids to have them at that age.
I'm talking about a group of parents weathering it out together. Not a school form. How many parents do you know who thought it was beneficial back when they bought the phone or introduced the iPad - but they regret it later? I know scores. I know it's annoying when older parents say, "learn from my mistakes." But here we are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The only kids I know who had phones that early had divorced parents.
+1
Which I sorta get but then it’s annoying because they have free range access to the internet and my kid has told me he’s seen YouTube videos and things he isn’t supposed to watch on his friend’s phone. I try to relax on it because I know I can’t fully control what my kids see outside the home, so I try to keep a running dialogue with them about the realities of the internet and how anyone can post anything. I’d rather he come tell me what he saw than worry I’m going to flip out over it.
That said I don’t understand why divorced parents can’t just get their kid a dumb phone? There are old school cells that just have call and texting abilities.
My kid just finally got a gizmo watch in 5th. That seems sufficient for now.
Anonymous wrote:The only kids I know who had phones that early had divorced parents.
Anonymous wrote:I got my 5th grader a phone (VERY reluctantly) when school started this year, because he is taking the bus home and will be at home alone for up to 30-45 minutes. We have two different neighbors who are aware of the plan and will usually be home in case of an emergency, but we still felt like it was important for him to be able to call us or a neighbor if he needed help, so we don't have to rely on the neighbors.
We could NOT find a "dumb" phone without any internet access (if you already have one, that is probably your best bet or maybe you can find one used).
My husband found an app to lock down any and all apps and so he can literally do NOTHING except make phone calls during certain times, listen to spotify family, and we let him have the weather app lol.
He originally had access to his camera/photos; however, we discovered he took some inappropriate photos on the school bus - another child giving the middle finger and so he showed us he is not ready to have access to that. NO access to messaging. TBH, kids can get in SO much trouble without even understanding the consequences through texting, photos, and of course social media.
He knows that if he misbehaves, he will have the phone taken away & will have to go to after-school care (which makes for a very long day for him). He will not have access to additional apps on his phone until he is much older, but I will allow him to call his friends and chat if they want to talk on the phone.
Anonymous wrote:My kid got a phone around that age. She’s now a HS senior with a 4.0 GPA and 1550 SAT, who has learned strategies for putting the phone down and getting work done. Giving your kid a phone later doesn’t necessarily make them better equipped to learn how to control their phone usage. Arguably it makes them less equipped.