Well, they aren't are they or they wouldn't give the phones to such young kids.
Before Xmas I was travelling home on the train and two youngsters, about two years old, each had their smartfones to keep them occupied whilst both parents were on their smartfones. Lazy parenting.
Its actually very, very simple. You restrict their usage to a reasonable level, don't allow the devices at the dinner table, don't allow the devices in their rooms at night, and learn to say the word 'no'.
Its actually very, very simple. You restrict their usage to a reasonable level, don't allow the devices at the dinner table, don't allow the devices in their rooms at night, and learn to say the word 'no'.
All correct - but I'd add ban them in schools - there must be a way that the kids can hand them in on arrival, and collect them when they leave.
They do not need them during school hours.
It's getting bit scary now. Little kidz addicted to their phones. They seem to barely know - or want to know - what the Beeb's and other mainstream broadcasters offerings are. How do you wean them off it when (seen it with my own eyes) a three year old knows how to call up their favourite Youtube vids and also knows how to effortlessly 'Skip Ad'
They are banned at my son's school. You can have a phone in your bag, switched off, for use to and from home. But if it goes off in a lesson, or you're seen using it anywhere at school, then you are in the SHIT.
Good rule.
We don't have a huge problem in our house with this sort of thing. But then there are few out there who say "No" as emphatically and consistently as my wife
A classic thread of a different generation scared about change, its how kids communicate these days, my daughters college have embraced smart phones as a way of communicating with parents and students. Times have changed chaps keep up.
My kids use phones to send invitations to birthday parties, organise days out it’s just the way these days. We haven’t had a land line for years no one would use it if we did. I’m 50 and run my business through my phone, embrace technology.The only thing that’s scary is parents being happy to let, even encourage, their kids live in a virtual world. I accept that this is an old codger’s view.
Yep, exactly the way to curb it and leave the parents in control. However it is very time consuming, boring, leads to tears quite a bit, and involves the parents doing as they say, so not being on their own phone/tablet all the time too. This seems a leap and sacrifice too far for many parents
Imagine having to spend time doing things with your kids and cramping your own selfish liefestyle
Anyone overly-complacent about the direction this increasingly invasive technology may be heading should do themselves a favour and catch a couple of episodes of the very excellent Black Mirror