Do your kids under age 13 use Facebook?

traces7

DIS Veteran
Joined
May 19, 2005
Messages
1,118
My 11 year old DD wants to have her own Facebook page. I don't even know anything at all about it, I don't do Facebook, but I've heard a lot about it. A lot of her friends at school do Facebook, even kids in 2nd grade I guess. But I see you're supposed to be 13 to use Facebook. Evidentally everyone just lies and says they are. :confused3

Do you let your kids use Facebook? I know that you can set up privacy settings, etc. Would you/do you let your child go on Facebook? She mostly wants it to keep in contact with friends from school over the summer.

Any advice is appreciated. Thanks! :)
 
Well, I don't know about second grade, but our MS daughter does have a facebook page. It's very difficult to stay in the social loop at her school w/o it. She's a pretty good kid who's demonstrated some responsibility & trust to us, so we're not too concerned. We also have a certain network of family friends w/ children who are part of her facebook world & we are with their kids, too. We're pretty comfortable if something's going on that we need to know about, we'll find out. YMMV
 
OP, you have answered your own question..........yes, if they are under 13, then they are lying. If the parents are allowing this it is a TERRIBLE example to set. It is NEVER okay to lie.
 
My 10 year old has a facebook- as do 75 percent of her friends. Some of the kids on her facebook are in 3rd grade- she is in 5th.
She is pretty good about it- she told me the other day that she blocked one of the apps on there because "it was not for children".
 

OP, you have answered your own question..........yes, if they are under 13, then they are lying. If the parents are allowing this it is a TERRIBLE example to set. It is NEVER okay to lie.

I completely agree. I didn't make the facebook rules, facebook did. And, there is a VERY GOOD REASON for the rules they make. Have you noticed the advertising they run all over that site? It is specific to the age group you register under. Since the minimum age for facebook is 13, the ads are appropriate to 13 and up, which isn't necessarily appropriate for 10. I've told my DD that I will consider letting her have a facebook account when she doesn't have to lie to get one...and even then I might not let her. I don't care how many of her friends have one. They aren't my kid.

I just cannot fathom letting my 10 year old knowingly violate the rules. Bad message, IMO.
 
DS10 has been using facebook for about a year. He has the privacy settings set so those who he friends are able to see any of his info. I'm friends with him as well so am able to see what's on his page. For friends he has aunts/uncles/grandparents etc... as well as some classmates. He'll go on and play games and stuff with his friends or relatives.
I don't feel it makes me a bad parent.
 
I'm not going to comment on if you should let her get one or not, that's you're decision, but if you let her get one, it would probably be a smart idea for you to get one too and be her friend. The privacy settings are pretty rigid if you set them up correctly.
 
A principal in NJ recently sent this home with all the middle school kids at his building. I think it's GREAT and sums up my feelings on kids and Facebook (and Myspace, etc):

"Anthony Orsini, the principal at Benjamin Franklin Middle School in Ridgewood, New Jersey. He recently sent the following email to all parents of children attending his school:

Dear BF Community:
When I arrived in Ridgewood, Facebook did not exist, YouTube did not exist, and MySpace was barely in existence. Formspring (one of the newest Internet scourges, a site meant simply to post cruel things about people anonymously) wasn’t even in someone’s mind.

In 2010, social networking sites have now become commonplace, and technology use by students is beyond prevalent.

It is time for every single member of the BF community to take a stand!

There is absolutely no reason for any middle school student to be a part of a social networking site!

Let me repeat that - there is absolutely, positively no reason for any middle school student to be a part of a social networking site! None.

5 of the last 8 parents who we have informed that their child was posting inappropriate things on Facebook said their child did not have an account. Every single one of the students had an account.

3 students yesterday told a guidance counselor that their parents told them to close their accounts when the parents learned they had an account. All three students told their parents it was closed. All three students still had an account after telling their parents it was closed.

Most students are part of more than one social networking site.

Please do the following: sit down with your child (and they are just children still) and tell them that they are not allowed to be a member of any social networking site. Today!

Let them know that you will at some point every week be checking their text messages online! You have the ability to do this through your cell phone provider.

Let them know that you will be installing Parental Control software so you can tell every place they have visited online, and everything they have instant messaged or written to a friend. Don’t install it behind their back, but install it!

Over 90% of homework does not require the Internet, or even a computer. Do not allow them to have a computer in their room. There is no need.

Know that they can text others even if their phone doesn’t have texting capability, either through the computer or through their iPod Touch.

Have a central “docking system,” preferably in your bedroom, where all electronics in the home get charged each night, especially anything with a cell or with wi-fi capability (remember when you were in high school and you would sneak the phone into your bedroom at Midnight to talk to your girlfriend or boyfriend all night - now imagine what they can do with the technology in their rooms).

If your son or daughter is attacked through one of these sites or through texting, immediately go to the police! Insist that they investigate every situation. Also, contact the site and report the attack to the site - they have an obligation to suspend accounts, or they are liable for what is written.

We as a school can offer guidance and try to build up any student who has been injured by the social networking scourge, but please insist the authorities get involved.

For online gaming, do not allow them to have the interactive communication devices. If they want to play Call of Duty online with someone from Seattle, fine. They don’t need to talk to the person.

The threat to your son or daughter from online adult predators is insignificant compared to the damage that children at this age constantly and repeatedly do to one another through social networking sites or through text and picture messaging.
It is not hyperbole for me to write that the pain caused by social networking sites is beyond significant. It is psychologically detrimental and we will find out it will have significant long-term effects, as well as all the horrible social effects it already creates.

I will be more than happy to take the blame off you as a parent if it is too difficult to have the students close their accounts, but it is time they all get closed and the texts always get checked.

I want to be clear - this email is not anti-technology, and we will continue to teach responsible technology practices to students. They are simply not psychologically ready for the damage that one mean person online can cause, and I don’t want any of our students to go through the unnecessary pain that too many of them have already experienced.

Some people advocate that the parents and the school should teach responsible social networking to students because these sites are part of the world in which we live.

I disagree. It is not worth the risk to your child to allow them the independence at this age to manage these sites on their own, not because they are not good kids or responsible, but because you cannot control the poor actions of anonymous others.

Learn as a family about cyber safety together at www.wiredsafety.org for your own knowledge. It is a great site. But then do everything I asked in this email - because there really is no reason a child needs to have one of these accounts.

Please take action in your own home today.

Sincerely,

Anthony Orsini
Principal, BFMS
 
I have an 11 yo DS and the simple answer is No. He needs to find another way to stay in the social loop.
 
My 10 year old does NOT have one. He has played some games on mine or my wifes accounts (such as Bejeweled Blitz or Rollar Coaster kingdom) but doesnt have his own page.

To the best of my knowledge, I dont know of any of his friends that have one and he's never asked to have his own page. We wouldn't let him anyway at this point, but probably would when he was of age (13) as long as he was friends with both of us and we knew his account password.
 
I let my 13 yo DD have one, but decided she really didn't need the drama in her life at this point, and I locked her out of it by changing her password. I am amazed by all of the younger kids that have FB accounts.
 
I am too amazed at how many younger kids have an account as well. My kids didn't get their accounts till they were 14 and 15. We both my dh and I got one too so we can be their friend and we have their account pass words too. But here if you don;t have FB you don;t get certain assignments from certain teachers or even know if you have practice and stuff like that. So they needed one b/c of that but I monitor it all the time. :goodvibes
 
Nope, terms of service say 13
Rules are Rules.

When DD is 13 she knows it is something that is open for discussion but will not automatically be granted.

For the record, I have a FB account and I love it, but I'm not 11!
 
DS is almost 15 and he just recently created a FB account. It is definitely a major way that social events are planned in HS

DD is 10 and does not use FB. She is not interested at all, but even if she were, we would make her wait until she is 13. She does like seeing pictures that friends and family post on my account, but that is the closest she gets to using it
 
My kids as well as most of their friends do have FB accounts. If I could turn back time I would have said NO. My BFF's daughter and some of her friends are constantly being bullied through FB. Even after they deleted the offenders they would still find a way to make comments... ie friends of friends. It is totally ridiculous what these kids say and seemingly with no conscience. I asked my DD if this was a common occurance or if it was limited to BFF's DD. My DD said they all do it.

A family here was involved in a murder suicide. Step-dad and Mom. The daughter posted it on FB and got many supportive and loving comments. Someone also posted... "I heard you killed yourself." I couldn't believe it. Even a child should know that's inappropriate.
 
I got a friend request from the 11 year old daughter of a friend of mine. The kid had listed her birthday year that would have made her 15. Most of her friends profile pics were definitely adults or much older teens. Mom was not in her friends list. Her mom had no idea that the kid had made a fb page, lied about her age, had no clue who most of the "friends" were. So I reported the kid's page as well as being underage.
 
I don't think anyone under 13 should have a page. If they have one they have lied about their age. If parents allow them to do this it just sets a bad precedent. What happens the next time they want to lie about something they feel is "innocent"?
Today is my son's 13th birthday and setting up his FB page was the first thing he wanted to do this morning. DH and I were his first friends.
 
My dd is 12 and is not allowed to have a FB page. She does have friends who do and she has asked but was told no and don't ask again until she is 13.
 
Thanks for all the responses. I was just curious where other parents stand on this. I'm glad to see that I'm not the only one who thinks it's wrong saying you're 13 when you're not. I think I'm going to keep holding my DD off on signing up for Facebook. She's already been asking for about 6 months.

Thanks Carnie for posting that letter from the principal, that was very helpful.
 












Save Up to 30% on Rooms at Walt Disney World!

Save up to 30% on rooms at select Disney Resorts Collection hotels when you stay 5 consecutive nights or longer in late summer and early fall. Plus, enjoy other savings for shorter stays.This offer is valid for stays most nights from August 1 to October 11, 2025.
CLICK HERE













DIS Facebook DIS youtube DIS Instagram DIS Pinterest

Back
Top