Anonymous wrote:I'll stop when they can drive themselves to school. Depends on your hood.
Anonymous wrote:My kids' bus stop is a block away. Starting the year one was in 1st grade and one was prek 4, they have generally gone to and from the bus stop alone. When the older one was in the 4s year and K, I was at the bus stop like the rest of the parents. But I kind of wish the kids could all have more independence together. Meaning, I want my kids to be unsupervised, but they are actually standing around with a bunch of other parents.
Anonymous wrote:When I was young in a neighborhood where everyone knew each other - no one locked the doors( I know crazy ) but I remember an older high schooler riding his bike with his zipper unzipped circling me and my sister at the bus stop. It just looked like he was riding his bike but he had his Pennis hanging out and riding so close to us as we walked home. Of course I went home and told my mom, but that wouldn’t have happened if we had an adult present., and if a parent was watching from the window you wouldn’t think a thing. Anyways just something to think about.
Anonymous wrote:I would spend the 5.5 minutes it takes to look up my zip code in the sex offender registry. Then decide from there.
Anonymous wrote:I have a daughter in 6th grade and she used to walk to the bus stop. She doesn't anymore because 2 pit bulls came and attacked her. She also has scoliosis. Scoliosis is the bending of the spine. It sometimes hurts so bad that she falls over. Someone has to be there with her. She can't do a lot of the things that she used to be able to do. Her spine bend the opposite way that she does her flexible tricks so it hurts. She has to hit her spine to push it back into place. If your kid has nothing wrong, let them have some freedom!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Times have changed. Maybe it is a good thing, not a bad thing? I've seen lots of data to suggest that the crime rate has actually dropped, but maybe it it is our parents who should have been more careful. I used to play in storm sewer tunnels on the way home from school for crying out loud, NOT a good idea. And we had a long-term flasher problem, including a time he came into the girl's bathroom in our school. This was in the 70's in Fairfax. We didn't wear seatbelts either. Unfortunately there are alot of child predators out there. I want my kids to be independent, but I also need to work with the information I have, which is that there are lots of red dots on that sex offenders map in my zip code...
More awareness does not mean it has changed.
It depends on the kid and where you live. I think I'd be fine with them walking with friends around third grade, providing that they were mature enough.
Anonymous wrote:Times have changed. Maybe it is a good thing, not a bad thing? I've seen lots of data to suggest that the crime rate has actually dropped, but maybe it it is our parents who should have been more careful. I used to play in storm sewer tunnels on the way home from school for crying out loud, NOT a good idea. And we had a long-term flasher problem, including a time he came into the girl's bathroom in our school. This was in the 70's in Fairfax. We didn't wear seatbelts either. Unfortunately there are alot of child predators out there. I want my kids to be independent, but I also need to work with the information I have, which is that there are lots of red dots on that sex offenders map in my zip code...