Is Facebook Suitable For Kids

IS Facebook Suitable For Kids?
For over 25 million youths or teenagers, Facebook is replacing email or IRC Chat as "the" way to communicate, and parents are often left in the dust and wondering is it safe? As a personal benchmark, I have two kids aged 8 and 11 years having Facebook account. And yes, they are active with their Facebook activities but primarily for playing online games offered as Facebook application. This lead to a more serious question. What age can kids safely have a Facebook page? Should they insist to be their "Friend" and monitor their endless chatter?

A child's brain reaches its full size at age six and the gray matter is actually the thickest around age 12. Remember how the world was full of possibilities at that age? Because it truly is. After this stage, the brain begins to prune back gray matter and the phrase "use it or lose it" becomes key as certain brain cells die forever. The skills your child learns during adolescence; like sports, dancing, music or academics become hard wired. Other skills that are not being used will fall away.
 

What's a parent to do?

1) Be Involved - Kids will always be ahead of us in technology, so encourage them to show you how to set up a social networking page. This encourages them to share what they know and gives you access to what they are doing.

2) Be a Parent, not a Pal - Insist on knowing user names and passwords of all their social networking accounts. Explain to them it is not to be used to spy, but to have in case they were in some sort of danger.

3) Create a Balance - We want our kids to develop their own identity and become independent. Learn to trust them and allow opportunities for them to explore when it is age appropriate and set clear limits for internet use.

Most kid's today don't have a local bowling alley or soda shop to hang out, like the baby boomer generations had. They also aren't allowed to play outside until the street lights come on as recent generations enjoyed. Hours of skipping rope, climbing trees and building forts is replaced with the tap tapping of tiny keyboards and click on the mouse. The cyber playground has replaced the physical one, for better or worse. It is our job as parents to make sure their developing brains know how to do more than move a mouse around a keyboard and encourage more face to face social time

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