Smile at each other, make time for each other in your family.
~ Mother Teresa
Smart Technology enriches our lives in many ways. It helps us get messages, emails, Facebook posts and appointments the quickest we’ve ever been able to navigate the Internet. We can use it to watch our favorite programming for hours on end and find new favourites based on our watching algorithms. One could argue that SMART technology makes us more effective and less effective depending on the situation. If we are constantly dialled into a screen and not making the most of our time together as friends and family the technology is not moving us forward. Relationships require real “FaceTime” and we should encourage the youth in our sphere of influence to spend quality (no tech zone) time with friends and family. SMART is knowing when to utilize the convenience and fun of technology and knowing when to put it aside for the sake of our well-being. When you set limits with children, Dr. Lasser says, kids can start learning how to self-regulate and know when screen time is interfering too much with the rest of their lives. (nytimes.com)
Families have the fun of figuring out how to make space for “no tech zones” and as their children internalize this concept they reproduce the concept in the lives of their friendships.
We want to encourage families to do all they can to engage with their children and youth about what is important on this journey. The smartest thing our kids can choose is to love the Lord their God with all their heart, soul, and strength. May we seek out ways to spend meaningful and anticipated real time together as a family to nurture faith in the context of those family relationships.
Parents, grandparents and great-grandparents can have a part in imparting their spiritual “smarts” to the next generation.
Let's do coffee
Marleigh and Marsha are available for a coffee house style presentation and discussion on this issue for schools, churches and community groups.
Set Limits to Screen Time
Setting limits to screen time helps build healthy habits for the future. It is important to create rules and to share these rules with other adults in your child’s life. For your child’s safety when using tablets, computers or phones, look for apps that provide parental controls which can help block sites and enforce time limits.
Screen time for children younger than 2 years is not recommended. For children aged 2 to 5 years, limit routine or regular screen time to less than 1 hour per day. (www.canadahealth.ca)
It is a rugged landscape parents need to navigate with their children in an age of digital technology. Many families get creative when setting and keeping technology limits for kids. Drawing the lines is the easy part but keeping them consistent is a major task for family life. There are so many important and imperative reasons to be a guard on the wall every day with kids of all ages. There are potential dangers from very young children (babies) with the issues changing with the development of the child all the way to teenage years.
With young children the dangers can be in the actual brain development. As children/adolescents grow the content they can access, the constant attachment even to friends can be too much for the developing youth. Limits and boundaries are the only way to instill health into a digital technology age. The good news is there are many ideas and support for families raising children in the digital age.
Be a good example
Concern and care for the young people in our sphere of influence is a powerful responsibility. Their growing up years go by quickly and how we care for them forms them in real time.
So many things to do