Anonymous wrote:What answer means I "win" as a parent and get to lord it over the rest of you slobs? That answer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think "no screens" is real. Has my kid been in the room with the news on? Yup. Has my kid seen basketball? Yup. Has my kid seen a picture of himself on the phone? Yup.
I think the bigger distinction is kids programming. Kids programming annoys me and kids asking for kids programming annoys me, so my kid doesn't get to watch it.
No, it’s real. My kid is nearly two and has never seen our tv on (he calls it the “rectangle”) and has never seen an image of himself on our phone or FaceTime.
PP here. Your toddler has never grabbed your phone and had it light up to reveal your screen? Your kid has never been to the mall or in a restaurant or store with a tv playing? Your toddler has never seen the screen on a car’s GPS? Your kid has never taken a selfie with you? Ok, darling.
Actually, no to all your questions, darling.
Oh, cupcake. Your delusion is hysterical.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think "no screens" is real. Has my kid been in the room with the news on? Yup. Has my kid seen basketball? Yup. Has my kid seen a picture of himself on the phone? Yup.
I think the bigger distinction is kids programming. Kids programming annoys me and kids asking for kids programming annoys me, so my kid doesn't get to watch it.
No, it’s real. My kid is nearly two and has never seen our tv on (he calls it the “rectangle”) and has never seen an image of himself on our phone or FaceTime.
Your kid has never seen you on a work videoconference, run over to sit in your lap, and started waving at everyone in the meeting?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think "no screens" is real. Has my kid been in the room with the news on? Yup. Has my kid seen basketball? Yup. Has my kid seen a picture of himself on the phone? Yup.
I think the bigger distinction is kids programming. Kids programming annoys me and kids asking for kids programming annoys me, so my kid doesn't get to watch it.
No, it’s real. My kid is nearly two and has never seen our tv on (he calls it the “rectangle”) and has never seen an image of himself on our phone or FaceTime.
PP here. Your toddler has never grabbed your phone and had it light up to reveal your screen? Your kid has never been to the mall or in a restaurant or store with a tv playing? Your toddler has never seen the screen on a car’s GPS? Your kid has never taken a selfie with you? Ok, darling.
Actually, no to all your questions, darling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes made it until age 4 with virtual PK. I don't really see a difference with the screentime kids and no screen kids.
Myopia? Glasses and such will become more apparent later. I've worked with hundreds of kids and it is apparent behavior-wise who is dependent on screens, who watched loads (but still had enough of a life to not become dependent or used it as a minor social crutch), who had a healthy mix of screen time vs real life, and who had limited screens growing up, at least to age 8-16 (when I had them). The latter group had the best social skills and attention spans. Enough has already been done on screens damaging eye sight that it doesn't warrant fully delving into here.
Those experiences were pre-kids and heavily influenced my stance on heavily limiting screens. No screens til two and then only things like nature documentaries. They didn't really care for Facetime. Family movie nights about once a week are fine. We allow educational games like Roller Coaster Tycoon or Zoo Tycoon/Planet Zoo beginning in 1st or 2nd grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes made it until age 4 with virtual PK. I don't really see a difference with the screentime kids and no screen kids.
Myopia? Glasses and such will become more apparent later. I've worked with hundreds of kids and it is apparent behavior-wise who is dependent on screens, who watched loads (but still had enough of a life to not become dependent or used it as a minor social crutch), who had a healthy mix of screen time vs real life, and who had limited screens growing up, at least to age 8-16 (when I had them). The latter group had the best social skills and attention spans. Enough has already been done on screens damaging eye sight that it doesn't warrant fully delving into here.
Those experiences were pre-kids and heavily influenced my stance on heavily limiting screens. No screens til two and then only things like nature documentaries. They didn't really care for Facetime. Family movie nights about once a week are fine. We allow educational games like Roller Coaster Tycoon or Zoo Tycoon/Planet Zoo beginning in 1st or 2nd grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think "no screens" is real. Has my kid been in the room with the news on? Yup. Has my kid seen basketball? Yup. Has my kid seen a picture of himself on the phone? Yup.
I think the bigger distinction is kids programming. Kids programming annoys me and kids asking for kids programming annoys me, so my kid doesn't get to watch it.
Why couldn’t it be real? We don’t have a TV.
You have a screen because you're using it to reply.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just curious.
With covid isolation and working from home, we didn’t make it.
If you’ve ever watched tv with your kid in the room, that counts as “screen time.” So no.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think "no screens" is real. Has my kid been in the room with the news on? Yup. Has my kid seen basketball? Yup. Has my kid seen a picture of himself on the phone? Yup.
I think the bigger distinction is kids programming. Kids programming annoys me and kids asking for kids programming annoys me, so my kid doesn't get to watch it.
No, it’s real. My kid is nearly two and has never seen our tv on (he calls it the “rectangle”) and has never seen an image of himself on our phone or FaceTime.
PP here. Your toddler has never grabbed your phone and had it light up to reveal your screen? Your kid has never been to the mall or in a restaurant or store with a tv playing? Your toddler has never seen the screen on a car’s GPS? Your kid has never taken a selfie with you? Ok, darling.
Actually, no to all your questions, darling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think "no screens" is real. Has my kid been in the room with the news on? Yup. Has my kid seen basketball? Yup. Has my kid seen a picture of himself on the phone? Yup.
I think the bigger distinction is kids programming. Kids programming annoys me and kids asking for kids programming annoys me, so my kid doesn't get to watch it.
No, it’s real. My kid is nearly two and has never seen our tv on (he calls it the “rectangle”) and has never seen an image of himself on our phone or FaceTime.