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View Poll Results: Is it OK for parents to monitor their kids' activities? | |||
FOR - Yes they should, because that might help in keeping a tag on their children's activities |
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11 | 84.62% |
AGAINST - No they should not, because it will make the kids realise the constant surveillance |
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2 | 15.38% |
Voters: 13. You may not vote on this poll |
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#1
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HDC Weekly Debate #1 - Is it OK for parents to monitor their kids' activities?
Often, I have been a keen observer on sporadic and healthy debates springing up in sparse threads which makes for very engrossing reading. I must say HDC members are very talented when it comes to exchanging ideas or generating a healthy debate, each respecting the other's point of view.
Which gave me the idea for this thread...every week, we shall have a Weekly HDC Debate on a raging current topic. You may choose your side in the poll - FOR or AGAINST - and then proceed to put forth your point of view, or argument, of why you have made that particular choice. So, onwards into our very first topic... There's been so many incidents involving teenagers going out of control since the Virginia Tech massacre. Lately in our own HDC forum, we have seen videos of shocking brutality committed by...teenagers! News of teenagers rampaging through an Australian school made the rounds...gangs, punks, emulating gangsters... Is today's teenager insecure? Or does he need psychiatric evaluation? Depression, anorexia, violent behaviour...these symptoms were more or less somewhat under control, but how aggressively has this poured out in the past few years. Do parents share any sort of responsibility for their children's actions? Should kids be let free to make their own decisions regarding company, friendship, choices and futures? OR Should parents monitor their kids closely till they are good enough to take their own decisions? Will a kid feel safe at a home where his / her parents are either a) very possessive and careful (or) b) very lenient and let him do his own stuff? I know we have a lot of concerned parents as members of HDC, some of them even grandparents also. Things might have been different like...say...10 years ago, but today, what can you do...in your role as a senior in your family, to cope with such a situation? Analyse, and feel free to put forward your view on this very critical problem which faces our society today. And please be reminded that this topic is to generate a sort of healthy debate, and should not deteriorate into name-calling or verbal abuse. Go ahead, folks.
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"If you gaze for long into an abyss, the abyss gazes also into you." - Friedrich Nietzsche Last edited by _____V_____; 04-13-2008 at 10:01 AM. |
#2
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I think parents should monitor there kids to an certain point.Like keeping track of who there friends with and who they talk to on the internet.
But at the same time I think more parents should discipline their children to.But parents are afraid to do so cause everything is considered child abuse these days. Kids these days suffer from lack of positive reinforcement.Parents need to be more active in there child life.Not spying on them but spending more time with them and really driving the fact into them about whats right and whats wrong.
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#3
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Very well said, Freak. I totally agree about a parent being his kid's best friend can help solve this problem in a HUGE way.
Choose please, in the poll too.
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"If you gaze for long into an abyss, the abyss gazes also into you." - Friedrich Nietzsche |
#4
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There is a difference between monitoring and spying. I monitor by simply staying involved in my kids' lives and sharing my enthusisams with them.
I feel the biggest problem is that parents wait too long to open a 100% honest dialog with thier kids, thinking that young children cannot handle the truth. As a result pre-teens raised in this kind of environment are getting "the truth" (sex, drugs, religion, death, etc) from sources outside the home. This nulifies the parent's point of view RIGHT at the time when most parents (that I know, at least) try to establish this dialog. At this point, the kids think their parents are dorks and hide stuff from them. Then parent end up spying, which makes the kids feel they aren't trustworthy. Being honest early and staying involved in your childrens' lives is the way I've chosen to avoid spying. I know my kids will tell me the truth, because I give them the same respect. I actually have other kids coming over to ask my advice on how to tell their parents about stupid shit they've done - which is an awkward position to be in. But I'm also the only paret in my son's class that makes the other children call me Mr. Keller. All the other parents allow the children to call them by thier first names, becasue they don't want to feel old. THIS IS BULLSHIT!!!!!! Without a title, the kids view you as an equal... I am not my children's equal, I am THE authority figure in thier lives and act as an authority around all the other children in our neighborhood.
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"Little, vicious minds abound with anger and revenge, and are incapable of feeling the pleasure of forgiving their enemies." Earl of Chesterfield "A man that studieth revenge keeps his own wounds green, which otherwise would heal and do well." Francis Bacon |
#5
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I am for it because if the parents involved themselves in their kids lives on a daily basis I believe it would help take away some of the angst and craziness that has occured with teens today. The teens who fight people, join gangs, do drugs, and all that in my mind are shut out by their parents or abused by their parents or someone in their family. If they had their parents support and help in their lives I think it would completely cut down on all the violence.
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#6
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Very true. You are their father AND their friend, both at the same time. You are an excellent example, Sean.
There's nothing like spending quality time AND quality interaction with your own children because, for the simple reason, they are YOUR OWN CHILDREN. When one can go out and waste mindless hours with one's friends partying and doing other stuff...why can't one use that SAME time to sit together with one's own kid and ease him into one's life by way of positive interactions? That way they will always have someone close to their heart to be open with, which would be a HUGE factor in them not straying away into such bad company. Our kids need us too, more than we realise it. All good points, Sean...and Gore too.
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"If you gaze for long into an abyss, the abyss gazes also into you." - Friedrich Nietzsche |
#7
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Thank's V.
Parents just need to try and involve themselves as much as possible in their kids lives.
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#8
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I've said this before - but most of the kids acting like gangsters are kids who's parents take little or no roll in their childrens lives.
especially single parents. 2 parents trying to raise a kid can be tough enough - let alone 1. I know shit happens and not all single parents planned things to be that way - i'm just saying it's really hard to be there for a kid when you're earning the bread by yourself. then there are the kids who are the children of other kids. teenage pregnancy is no doubt the largest contributer to creating little career criminals there is. no one to set an example, no one to give a shit. do i monitor my kid ? .. not really - he's too young and i doubt that we ever will need to even when he's older. We're very involved in our sons life - and we have a 100% open and honest relationship with him. I'm not saying we dont make mistakes .. every parent - even the best ones - do, but all the signs are looking good so far. He can be a handful with a pretty severe case of ADHD ... but he's bright, funny, kind, sensitive and loving ... I'm pretty sure he's going to do great - and we're proud of him.
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You make stupid look smart. |
#9
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good job, Urge. I know you're doing it right.
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"Little, vicious minds abound with anger and revenge, and are incapable of feeling the pleasure of forgiving their enemies." Earl of Chesterfield "A man that studieth revenge keeps his own wounds green, which otherwise would heal and do well." Francis Bacon |
#10
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i'll let you know in 15 years :)
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You make stupid look smart. |
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