redrosesix
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Feb 29, 2008
- Messages
- 5,016
Well I'm from Canada so our schooling is a little different. There is no "Middle school", it's just elementary, jk - grade 8, and High school, 9- grade 12.
I gave my daughter her cell phone in grade 8 for graduation. Some students had one before then but why on earth would you need one before grade 6?
I live in Canada too, and our school system in Nova Scotia is not at all like this, although it is different across the province. In our city, all kids go P-6, then Junior High from 7-9, then HS from 10-12. But...if we move to the country this summer as planned, she will be attending middle school beginning in grade 6, or grade 7, depending on where we buy the house. And some kids go P-3, then 4-9, then 10-12.
Just a side issue, but I think that once kids are out of elementary school, activities and everything change. They might need a cell phone sooner than if they were still going to school with the little kids.
So, you won't get your kid a cell phone, yet expect kids who do have cell phones to let your child use their paid for minutes if she needs them? What if the child is paying for their own minutes with their own babysitting money and has limited minutes?
You really think this is ok to mooch off their minutes?
If you choose to not get your child a cell phone, then you should also teach your child that taking minutes from somebody else is also not ok. It is the same thing as saying "I am going to send my child to the mall, but if he needs some money for lunch, most kids have money, so he can just use some of theirs if he is hungry."
Your decision to not get your child a cell phone, no problem. But accept the consequences of your decision that your child might not be able to get in touch with you.
I think it pretty hypocritical to say "My kid can't have a cell phone, but in an emergency, they can just use somebody else's phone." If you think there is ever a need for your child to borrow a cell phone, it is time to get them their own.
I think it is a family's decision whether a cell phone is appropriate or not for their family. Their decision. However, the attitude that their kid can just use somebody else's phone is just wrong.
ITA with this.

I also have to add...
the event that made us all so happy we had bought DD a cell phone was not her getting out late or early from an activity. It was us getting caught in a sudden snowstorm on the way to get her at school. DH got stuck in traffic, roads totally unpassable. I tried calling the school so they wouldn't send her outside but I couldn't get through (obviously other parents were trying to do the same thing). So I called her cell which she turns on every day as she puts on her coat to leave. There were many many calls back and forth in the hour it took us to get her from school (and no way the school secretary would have let her use the phone that many times), most of them just her calling to update us on how many kids remained stranded at the school.
The greatest quote - real life is what happens when you're making other plans. There are so many things that could make us late to pick her up from either school or activities, and I wouldn't want her wondering even for a second when we'll get there.