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    Getting my son not to glue himself to the computer?

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Working With Your Child
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    • L Offline
      Lance G.0723 King
      last edited by

      I don’t think there is anything inherently wrong with facebook but just like so many things in children’s lives (Xbox, texting, TV) it uses up amazing amounts of time with no real productivity. Not that there is anything wrong with that, we all need time out but children need to learn how to utilise the power of delayed gratification. "Of course you can spend time on Facebook…when your homework, your study and your chores are done"


      I think there is a bit much panic about Facebook - I find it to be an amazingly open system where really it is almost impossible to hide malicious intent. The user has full control over who has access to them and it is a great mechanism for parents to use to keep an eye on what their children are doing.

      Ultimately though if you are concerned about the amount of time your child is spending on the computer… turn it off! Who pays for the electricity in your home? Who is in charge? Take it away, lock it in a cupboard. But if your child is achieving well, is completing everything you expect of him and still spending a lot of time on the computer, where is the problem?

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      • H Offline
        HopeandSorrows
        last edited by

        UncleLim:
        HopeandSorrows:

        U meant this is a family rule in your house and something that is agreed upon within your family that No Facebook is allowed? :rahrah:


        We all have our Facebook pages to pretend we are \"normal\" like other people. But we do not log on or check for friends or play games. We live our lives in the real world and play real games like badminton, and farm real plants, and send friends real cakes that we bake!! :rotflmao:

        Should encourage such culture in homes! :lovesite: But UncleLim, how did your kids react when you enforce the house rules initially?

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        • C Offline
          cnimed
          last edited by

          I think it’s different when you set the ground rules from the start, as opposed to backtracking. I limit screen time (computer/tv/ipad) for my children from the very first time they use the media. Any screen time they get is a bonus. It’s not surprising to spend a weekday without them looking at any screen at all. There are no strong reactions, it is simply mum’s rules, and they do notice that I don’t spend much time on TV or electronics either. They have many other hobbies and activites to occupy themselves with.


          I am not against computer or TV. They are indispensable to me and my husband. But I am very selective with the usage, and the time spent on them. I do also think that one needs enough of real life to be able to produce something fruitful in cyber life, be it content or design. Even internet research needs to be complemented with real research work in a library at some point if it is to be substantial.

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          • D Offline
            dadsandmoms
            last edited by

            hello mommies and daddies,


            I think this issue is very important and should be dealt with as early as possible and as early as possible. some of my friends felt that ipads and computers are good sources of distraction for the kids that gives the parents some space to breathe but over time its a bad bad mistake. Now they are ONLY GLUED TO IPAD AND IPHONE AND ANDROID PHONE.

            from some understanding of this kind of computer stuff is not allowing the children to grow a dependency on them and as parents we should physically distance the children from the computers by limiting play time or physically bringing them away from the devices by bringing them out.

            of course, by bringing them out the activities have to be fun enough to keep their minds off the computer games.cos i stay near kallang there so i bring them to the indoor playground to play and make it fun for them. http://goo.gl/0OgLt i love to bring them there because i can also take a small breather by the side of the cafe while my kids interact with other boyboys

            while we , as grownups, know whats good for them , better use our authority to separate them first because this is something we can impose on them. When they are older and more rebellious i think it will be hard to change them already so i try to keep them apart from computers and only limit their time with the devices 🙂 hope it helps !

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            • W Offline
              Wockets
              last edited by

              If they have youtube available to them , this can help enlighten them if they understand.


              http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zz7mWKeNgZE

              Letting them make the choice themselves would be far better them forcing the choice down their throat.

              How long can u force things down their throat before they regurgitate them ?

              Alternatively , share with them success stories and hope they can idolize one of them

              e.g. Mark Zuckerberg , Bill gates etc. Not those korean pop bands or that sort of idols.

              rags to riches http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/08/17/rags-to-riches-worlds-ric_n_671253.html#s120920&title=Larry_Ellison_Oracle

              Often as a kid , they would have no idea what they want and when they grow up , they would still have no idea what they want.

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              • I Offline
                Ichigokun
                last edited by

                XD Honestly, I find Facebook games quite boring and lame. I don’t even bother to play those games.


                I just look up for some games on google and download them.

                Well, if ur child is too glued to the computer, learn from my mother!

                1) Take out the Internet modem from the desktop and hide it

                2) If it’s a laptop, hide the entire laptop

                3) (WARNING! UNLESS YOU ARE A PRO AT DISMANTLING COMPUTER PARTS, DONT TRY THIS) Dismantle the hard disk storage space from the computer

                4) WHIP OUT THE CANE AND THREATEN (😂)

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                • I Offline
                  Ichigokun
                  last edited by

                  HopeandSorrows:
                  My Primary 5 boy spends a lot of his free time on Facebook, chatting, playing games. Apart from his regular school work, swimming lessons and Chinese language lessons - he park himself in front of his comp.


                  Want to scold also dunno what to scold.
                  Maybe sign ur boy up for tons of tuition lessons he will get so tired and he has no time for computer?

                  Well, that's for if you are Kiasu, auntie and rich enough :rotflmao:

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                  • C Offline
                    csa
                    last edited by

                    Just to share, i bought a NetGenie wi-fi router from a singaporean friend to control the internet access timings as well as to allow/block websites according to kids age. no need to turn on/off the parental control and can set the kids time and hours to spend online. No need to install software on smartphone, ipad, pc, laptop. Its a good investment. Hope this helps!

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