What's the Right Age for a Cell Phone?
My daughter got her first cell phone in 7th grade (after much
lobbying, whining, begging, and squabbling). Because she took public
transportation home from school, my husband and I decided it was a good idea
from a safety standpoint.
There were no texts, the phone couldn't take pictures, she was
told how many minutes were allowed, and we did take it away from her as a
punishment once (and it was very effective). Flash forward to the next child,
four years her junior. He got a phone in 6th grade, mostly for the same
reasons.
But technology had moved on, and his came with texting and photo
ability, not to mention games. By then, our daughter had also become a text
messaging ninja, and we'd upgraded our plan for unlimited texts (a very wise
move) and replacement insurance (ditto).
Many parents wrestle with the issue of cell phones for kids.
What's the right age for kids to get cell phones, and what functions are age
appropriate? And what about smart phones with their abilities to download apps
(not to mention their additional data plans!)?
These questions are best answered by asking other questions:
§ How independent are your
kids?
§ Do your children
"need" to be in touch for safety reasons — or social ones?
§ How responsible are they?
§ Can they get behind the
concept of limits for minutes talked and apps downloaded?
§ Can they be trusted not to
text during class, disturb others with their conversations, and to use the
text, photo, and video functions responsibly (and not to embarrass or harass
others)?
§ Do they really need a smart
phone that is also their music device, a portable movie and game player, and
portal to the Internet?
§ Do they need something that
gives their location information to their friends — and maybe some strangers,
too — as some of the new apps allow?
§ And do you want to add all
the expense of new data plans? (Try keeping your temper when they announce that
their new smart phone got dropped in the toilet...)
Just remember: When you hand kids phones today, you're giving them
powerful communications and production tools. They can create text, images, and
videos that can be widely distributed and uploaded to Web sites. They can
broadcast their status and their location. They can download just about
everything in the world. If you think your children's technological savvy is
greater than their ability to use it wisely, pay attention to the gap. Times
may have changed, but parenting hasn't. We're still the parents. And it's our
job to say "no, not yet."
Credit:pbs
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