My first reason why parents should monitor a child's social media is because it allows them to see who they talk to and what they talk about which helps keep the child safe. These days younger kids …show more content…
On social media it’s easy for people to fake accounts and try to talk to you. People can try to get information from you, stalk you, or steal your identity. Young kids are gullible and don’t know how to decide if the person they’re talking to is safe or not. This can be dangerous and lead to serious problems, which is another reason parents should monitor conversations. Parents can also keep their kids safe by monitoring who they follow, blocking them from unsuitable media. My second reason parents should monitor kids social media is because it helps parents feel at ease. The world is a dangerous place and parents like to have clarity on what is going on with their kids. For example, some parents use apps to track where their kids are. This kind of monitoring reduces the chances of kids skipping school, going somewhere they aren’t allowed, or being kidnapped. Lastly, parents monitoring their kids social media gives parents the opportunity to educate their child about the dangers with social media. One danger that comes with social media is cyberbullying, which can come in many forms, whether it be …show more content…
Trust is by far one of the most important part of any relationship. Without trust a relationship is unstable and full of lies. If a parent doesn’t tell their child they’re monitoring them, and the child finds out, this will probably be seen as violation of trust. Even if a parent tells their child they’re being monitored, children will most likely take this as a message that they can’t be trusted, which could upset them. Lori Day, an educational psychologist and mom of a daughter in graduate school, says, “I think spying on kids is wrong. It’s a good way of sabotaging your relationship with your child if you get caught.” Secondly, monitoring your kids social media is an invasion of privacy. People believe kids should have the privacy they want on their phones. Jen Nessel, a communications coordinator for The Center for Constitutional Rights in New York and mother of an eight year old boy says, “There’s ways in which we want to keep our children safe, of course, but at the same time we have to respect them as whole human beings who deserve privacy.” Parents shouldn’t monitor their children because this holds them back from developing both mentally and socially. At the stage of adolescents kids start to branch off from their parents and