Phone
Then it happened.
“We were at a restaurant for my moms birthday. I looked over and there are my daughter and my oldest son texting, holding their phones under the table,” said the mom of four in Lewiston, Idaho. “I just came unglued. I was like, Are you kidding? Youre at your grandmas birthday party. Put those phones away now!”
We all know teens love their gadgets – more for texting than talking. But the devices are posing some new challenges for parents. How can they teach their tech-savvy kids some electronic etiquette?
So far, parents are learning on the fly, imposing new rules for their young offenders such as “no texting at dinner.”
Beth Herina of Ringwood, N.J., made that rule two years ago because her 13-year-old son was texting friends at the dinner table. She has another rule, too: No texting on family outings.
“He can text en route but not when it is family time,” she said. “And I ask questions about who he is texting.”
Her son Dylan may not like moms rules, but she considers them mild. Her brother-in-law goes into his childrens cell phone accounts to read their texts.
When it comes to gadgets like cell phones and computers, some kids and even some adults dont seem to consider their gadget behavior rude, said P.M. Forni, co-founder of Johns Hopkins Universitys Civility Initiative.
“Were seeing behavior that you never would have seen before,” he said. “Students getting up in the middle of class to answer their phones, texting during class, students watching TV on their laptops during lectures.”
Kopczynski said she told her 20-year-old son and 16-year-old daughter to shut their phones off and put them away, which they did, but it was their reaction to her order that still bothers her.
“That was a sad moment for me,” she said. “I grew up with rules, the no elbows on the table kind of things. And Ive raised my kids with that. But they didnt even realize what they were doing.”
Its not only cell phones that parents are restricting.
Some even go so far as to put the computer in a common area of the house so they can monitor the sites their children are visiting.
Laura Lambert, a Chicago mom of four, tries not to implement time limits and other rules. Her 16-year-old son has his own laptop now after years of using the family computer.
“What Ive found is if you say you only get 90 minutes, they obsess about it all day and they rush through everything else and it almost elevates the importance of it,” she said.
“I find they regulate (their usage) better if I just say I want you to balance your time better so you can get everything else done.”
For kids, the rules and parent checks can seem intrusive and a bit extreme.