15 answers

Limit Computer Time of 16 Year Old Daughter

She is a junior in HS. She is a good student and is attending a SAT prep class in the summer. She wants to spend the time that she is not in class on the computer - gaming (forsaken world), FB etc. I try to limit her to about 4 hours or so but I know she is on the computer at night (instead of sleeping). She wakes up around 10:30 AM or so. She is not doing anything productive other than the HW for the SAT class and her summer assignments. Should I let her be or should I keep nagging her OR should I take away her laptop after 11:30 PM?

Thx for any advice..

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She's 16 and a junior. I would still restrict the internet access. I have had to do that with the teens in my house.

This school year I will have 2 seniors in my house. I will be lifting the restrictions. They will be in college in 2012, so I want to see how they are going to manange by allowing them to fall under my protective unbrella while high school is free college is not and they can't afford to make any mistakes along the way.

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I'm surprised more people don't see this as an issue. At 16, she can get into all kinds of trouble on the internet. I would never allow a computer in my kids' rooms, and hopefully you have lots of firewalls set up to restrict her usage.

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Yes, you need to set limits and boundaries and enforce them. It's what parents do. ;) I think perhaps you need to give her projects to do during the day. Give her purpose for her days. I think it would be discouraging to only have computer time and very little else on a daily basis. It is my opinion that at 16 games need to be put away and real work needs to be done. We don't allow video games after age 14 in our house. They are considered adults, and must be about adult things. Gaming is a monumental waste of a life. We get one shot at this, why spend it that way?

3 moms found this helpful

You know she's on the computer at night instead of sleeping? So the computer's in her room. Talk to her about this first, so she knows what's coming, but then take it out of her room even if it's her own laptop. For fairness put ALL family computers (yours too) in a public space like the kitchen or dining room. And everyone, including her and you, uses computers in that space only. If she's up gaming, even silently, in the night, you can say, "Sorry, I can still hear you/know you're awake, and you're done here for the night." Setting a specific time for all gaming to stop is a good idea too. But if she has a smartphone or other device in her room she'll just go on using that after lights out.

Also work with her to find out what else she might want to do other than games for hours on end. Is she gaming live online with friends she knows or with people she only "knows" in the virtual world? Wouldn't she want to see some flesh-and-blood friends during all this free time she has and do something with them in person? Offer her the chance to invite other kids to the house for pizza and movies, or offer to drive them (if they're not driving) to the bowling alley, the movie theatre, whatever. What would disturb me as much as the gaming time is the lack of any face to face time with friends over the summer. Kids get so into their virtual worlds they tend to lose the ability to think about things to do outside the house. You may need to suggest things and then make it easy for her to get out and do them.

Maybe next summer, a job to save money for college!

3 moms found this helpful

She's 16 and a junior. I would still restrict the internet access. I have had to do that with the teens in my house.

This school year I will have 2 seniors in my house. I will be lifting the restrictions. They will be in college in 2012, so I want to see how they are going to manange by allowing them to fall under my protective unbrella while high school is free college is not and they can't afford to make any mistakes along the way.

3 moms found this helpful

I'd let her play until school starts.

3 moms found this helpful

My husband and I both work with computers.
We think our son will have plenty of time to work up a major case of carpel tunnel syndrome once he's in college and working.
For right now (he's 12) and through high school - we'll limit his recreational computer time to 2 hrs or less a day.
Now's his time to get outside and play in actual sunshine - not vegetate at a keyboard.
Get some plug locks, confiscate batteries, or just cut internet access to the whole house every night - she can stay up all night if she wants to but it won't be on the internet.
We set up rules for their own good, and also because if it's too comfortable at our home they'll never yearn for the freedom of becoming independent in a home of their own.
Our 16 yr old neighbor has a job at a supermarket - that puts a crimp in her internet time but she wants to earn the money for her own car, so it's what she wants to do.

2 moms found this helpful

I guess I don't see the problem?
It's summer break and she is taking classes.
That is going above and beyond what a lot of teens would be doing with their summers.
She is a good student, you say.
She is not wasting her summer, she is taking SAT prep classes. and doing assignments.
So what is the problem if she stays up a little late and sleeps a little late in the summer when she is still doing the good stuff she is doing?

I don't get why you would want to punish or restrict her when she is doing nothing wrong?
Just confused I guess.

To "Momofmany".
Video games are not always a "monumental waste of a life."
My husband works for Microsoft, used to work for Sony. He makes loads of money, has provided a great house for us and is a Video Game Software Engineer.
The average salary for someone in his field is around $80 - $90 Thousand per year.
It is NOT a waste. He loves his job and provides well for us and would not have it if he had not grown up playing video games and having a passion for it.

1 mom found this helpful

Isn't school about to start?

1 mom found this helpful

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