This thread has me chuckling a bit. My DD is now 20, so eventhough I am still paying for her phone, I see no need to monitor her activities. I didn't even check her phone in high school for texting at all. No need to, however, we made it quite clear that if we decided it would be necessary, we would have no issue checking her phone. I admit - I did log onto her facebook a couple of times...because I just wanted to everyone's prom pictures! (Shhh...DD doesn't know this!)
HOWEVER...when she was in middle school, and she had developed a fierce attitude over a couple of weeks. This was before she had texting, no facebook either. I did check her internet history. She was looking for boarding schools.Literally - I laughed until I cried.
IMO, my dd should have the same rights to privacy as I did at her age. Mom didn't listen in on my phone conversations or try to eavesdrop when friends came over. So, I give her the same rights.
BUT, we talk all the time, and so far (knock on wood) she has never hidden anything from me. We talk about how she should handle herself online and what she should or should not do--we had those talks before she got on Instagram and before snap chat existed.
She knows right from wrong, so at almost 16, its time to put it into practice without me snooping around.
IMO, my dd should have the same rights to privacy as I did at her age. Mom didn't listen in on my phone conversations or try to eavesdrop when friends came over. So, I give her the same rights.
BUT, we talk all the time, and so far (knock on wood) she has never hidden anything from me. We talk about how she should handle herself online and what she should or should not do--we had those talks before she got on Instagram and before snap chat existed.
My child knows that at any time I will randomly check her phone. Sometimes in front of her sometimes not. It's not something I do often. If I suspected something I will look more often.
I am strict but not unfair.
My rule is it's just to keep her safe, not to snoop. I skim it and anything I see that does not effect her safety that she has not talked about with me I do not mention. I ignore the language.
I consider her a good child. responsible, good grades and all of that but it does not mean she might not stray off the right path. I need to be there to make sure she is safe.
It's not going to keep her from everything but every little thing I can do is one more way to keep her safe.
It's the same for Facebook and Instagram and she knows that she will lose the phone, computer or whatever if I find that she is hiding things from me. She does not have to tell me every little thing but dangerous things, sneaking things will not fly. Maybe I won't find out, however if I do, her world as she knows it will change.
Lisa
IMO, my dd should have the same rights to privacy as I did at her age. Mom didn't listen in on my phone conversations or try to eavesdrop when friends came over. So, I give her the same rights.
Here is the problem I have. I get people are saying that it's the new form of communication for this generation and our parents didn't listen in on our calls. Every parent has their own style and I get that. I'm not criticizing or saying my way is right. I don't think anyone with a teenager feels like anything they are doing is right. Haha. But my thing is I sooooo wish my mother had listened in on my calls. I wish my mom had snooped! I gave my mother no reason not to trust me. I had a 4.0 GPA through high school. I was respectful. I followed every rule she set. Yet I still managed to sneak around and get involved in very unsafe relationships. There were no signs, no reason for her to check, went to church every sunday, youth group every week, volunteer work. I know I'm not the only one who put on an amazing show as a teenager. I've replayed my actions over and over and there is nothing that would have clued me as a parent to "snoop" on my child if they behaved like I did. Yet Lord knows someone should have!
My kids were not allowed to have cell phones until they were 16 and driving. At that point, if I felt they were responsible enough to drive, I was not going to worry about what they text.
I monitor less out of fear of what my daughter is doing, and more out of fear for what others may be doing to her that she might be embarrassed or afraid to talk about to me - the pervs out there starting up conversations via Instragram and what have you, and cyber-bullying.
Those type of things do not equate to our parents listening in on phone conversations. Kids could not bully anonymously the way they can now online. And the pervs didn't have such instant access. Could they randomly call phone numbers? Sure, but they didn't know a young girl would answer. And their voices would give them away as not just another kid. Nowadays, they basically have a straight line of access to our kids, and can disguise themselves in whatever way seems to get them that "in".
Maybe you all have street smart kids - I don't. My DD13 is hugely gullible. We just had an incident where she accepted a follower on Instragram that she thought was someone at school because "she knows someone with that first name"(despite all our conversations about how she's supposed to not only know, but be pretty good friends with anyone she lets follow her). Well, let's just say he wasn't the kid from school and DD13 learned what I meant by the word "perv" that day...and she WAS embarrassed to fess up to me about it...but thankfully I found out about it, and we were able to have yet another conversation about how to manage Instragram followers.
I don't. I need my child to know that I trust that I raised her right, she knows what is acceptable and is unacceptable and that I trust she's making the right choices. I don't want her to have to hide anything from me. More times than not, she'll say, hey look at this text. But everyone has their own parenting techniques and what works for me might not work for you. My daughter will be 16 in a few months and I was a helicopter parent too long....