Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:7th grade. The reward for making honor roll was having one reality show and one "fiction" show, either a half hour or an hour, each week. You slip academically, you lose it. Also, if home sick with fever, they could watch tv.
After they get into college, any college, they can watch as much tv as they want for the rest of senior year.
So you have made your kid a social pariah and are writing off any talent they may have in the graphic arts or computer programming
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:7th grade. The reward for making honor roll was having one reality show and one "fiction" show, either a half hour or an hour, each week. You slip academically, you lose it. Also, if home sick with fever, they could watch tv.
After they get into college, any college, they can watch as much tv as they want for the rest of senior year.
So you have made your kid a social pariah and are writing off any talent they may have in the graphic arts or computer programming
Anonymous wrote:7th grade. The reward for making honor roll was having one reality show and one "fiction" show, either a half hour or an hour, each week. You slip academically, you lose it. Also, if home sick with fever, they could watch tv.
After they get into college, any college, they can watch as much tv as they want for the rest of senior year.
Anonymous wrote:7th grade. The reward for making honor roll was having one reality show and one "fiction" show, either a half hour or an hour, each week. You slip academically, you lose it. Also, if home sick with fever, they could watch tv.
After they get into college, any college, they can watch as much tv as they want for the rest of senior year.
Anonymous wrote:We were just trying to hold on as long as possible! Oldest was five and younger was three. Both were already reading (little one not fluently but enough to spend 20 minutes with a new book alone and read to herself) and loved books.
TV is still not their first choice which is what we were hoping for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait. Do people feel like screens PREVENT kids from learning to read? Is that why you are waiting until they are reading?
Only first time moms of toddlers who want to be holier than thou actually believe this.
Stop, ladies. This thread is not for you. Move along.
Why? I thought it was for parents who don’t allow screens. That’s us! Do you also have to believe that it makes you a superior parent? I didn’t see that in the OP.
Everyone just stop with the “does it make you a superior parent” crap. It’s boring.
Anonymous wrote:We were just trying to hold on as long as possible! Oldest was five and younger was three. Both were already reading (little one not fluently but enough to spend 20 minutes with a new book alone and read to herself) and loved books.
TV is still not their first choice which is what we were hoping for.
Anonymous wrote:Your kids need to learn about screens to function in the world.
Anonymous wrote:Um... no? No age or milestone, per se. Because we weren't/aren't doing it so that our kid will "be ahead" or anything. And on the flipside, we felt no need for us, *as adults/parents*, to "introduce" it. To keep her occupied? To teach her things she'd probably learn better some other way (especially when younger)? To share a favorite movie? Eh, there are other things we share, for now.
So our kid got, or is getting, screen access very organically, when it's necessary and helpful on balance. Which means she is still pretty much screen free at 7, in terms of what most people who call it screen time would actually deem screen time to be meted out or whatever.
In other words-- when she started K, the school introduced screens to an extent. Fine. Rarely, she might help me online-shop for something because it's relevant. We went to a movie screening for a film her dad was in. I mean, obviously. We go to a museum and they have screen media in the exhibits. Great. Skype/Zoom has always been fine with me-- it's just a video phone call. Etc.
The only time setting a strict age makes sense to me, regardless of overall philosophy, is about 18 months, because their brains really don't process screen information well at all before then. And certainly as very young babies, TV/etc. triggers a loop in their orienting response-- that is, they essentially can't look away when they're overstimulated.
But otherwise, I don't see much point in setting a hard and fast age in any direction. Or milestone... except that certainly, it's probably easier to deal with screens past the tantrum/etc. age. Like 4-ish, I guess.