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As you are paying for it its your choice, my 11 year old has a phone and she pays for it herself, I wouldn't dream of searching through it unless I suspected she was in trouble and even then I would ask first. I do not have access to her Facebook but know she would give me the password if asked.
There are funny people on the internet, but also there are worse ones in real life. You can't shield them from everyone. I trust my children and we have discussed what can happen if she gives out personal info. It's also a lot about teaching your children common sense.
I agree with the concept of teaching ones child personal responsibility, but people on Facebook ARE people in real life. Yes, you need to teach them to deal with real life, and not completely shield them from it, but that is not at all the same as giving them limitless privacy and no real boundaries. You are abdicating your responsibility as a parent if you confuse the right of privacy of an adult with that of a dependant minor. Telling them something does not necessarily equate with them learning it and actually agreeing with it.
Please don't get me wrong, mine do not have limitless privacy or no boundaries, they have rules and punishments like anyone else, the people on her Facebook are people she knows and talks to, she does not interact with just anyone. Her profile is blocked from people finding her, she finds her friends from school to add. If any of my children misbehave they lose the right to use any pc in the house for a set period of time or until a lesson is learned. I just don't feel the need to go through her Facebook messages, texts or phone log. I can see her wall and everything she posts.
As you are paying for it its your choice, my 11 year old has a phone and she pays for it herself, I wouldn't dream of searching through it unless I suspected she was in trouble and even then I would ask first. I do not have access to her Facebook but know she would give me the password if asked.
There are funny people on the internet, but also there are worse ones in real life. You can't shield them from everyone. I trust my children and we have discussed what can happen if she gives out personal info. It's also a lot about teaching your children common sense.
I agree with the concept of teaching ones child personal responsibility, but people on Facebook ARE people in real life. Yes, you need to teach them to deal with real life, and not completely shield them from it, but that is not at all the same as giving them limitless privacy and no real boundaries. You are abdicating your responsibility as a parent if you confuse the right of privacy of an adult with that of a dependant minor. Telling them something does not necessarily equate with them learning it and actually agreeing with it.
Please don't get me wrong, mine do not have limitless privacy or no boundaries, they have rules and punishments like anyone else, the people on her Facebook are people she knows and talks to, she does not interact with just anyone. Her profile is blocked from people finding her, she finds her friends from school to add. If any of my children misbehave they lose the right to use any pc in the house for a set period of time or until a lesson is learned. I just don't feel the need to go through her Facebook messages, texts or phone log. I can see her wall and everything she posts.