I Prayed have prayed
Help us Lord as parents to get in our kids way at all times.
Reading Time: 2 minutes

Parents: I am an assistant principal in a middle school (grades 6-8). My number one job is to create and sustain a school environment where both students and teachers feel safe (physically, emotionally, and mentally) to teach, learn, innovate, and socialize. I take my job very seriously, as do my colleagues, and we work very hard to grow in our capacity to do our jobs on a daily basis.

I can’t begin to describe how much time I spend every day dealing with issues that stem from unsupervised cell phone usage by our students.

In situations where I have to search a student’s cell phone, I often get sick to my stomach at what I find (highly inappropriate photos, videos, messages, social media usage, etc). The things our students are willing to try and be a part of at such a young age gets worse and worse every year.

When I call parents to inform them of what is going on, I always ask them how often they search their kid’s phone. The shock gets even worse when 90% of them say hardly ever or never. And then they get upset at me, accuse me of lying to them about their kid’s role in certain situations, or expect me to somehow fix the situation.

Parents: it is your number one job as a parent to get in your kid’s way at all times.

Kids do not deserve privacy. You own their devices, not them. You should be having the hard conversations with them about life, relationships, their bodies, their futures, etc. It is your responsibility to provide social and emotional support, help build coping skills, and monitor their activities. And stop actively working against schools and start working with us. We are not the enemy. We are trying to fulfill the role of both parent and educator in many situations, and that is a very delicate and difficult line to walk.

Here are three tips for getting in your child’s way:

1. Eat dinner as a family every night and actually talk.

No devices allowed. Current research suggests that parents only spend about eight minutes a day in conversation with their kids. That’s unacceptable.

2. Check their devices EVERY SINGLE NIGHT.

You need to learn how to navigate their world. Inform yourself on how to use certain apps. Keep up with what apps are the most downloaded in the App Store. Make your kid show you their content and conversations and explain to you what is going on. Then give them advice.

3. Create opportunities for them to have experiences.

Take them to do new things. See new things. Learn new things. This not only builds resilience and strengthens their mental and emotional development, but it also strengthens your relationship with them.

And finally, do not let them take their phones into their rooms, shut their doors, and disappear for hours. Nothing good ever happens on the internet behind closed doors.

It is by far the most dangerous place our students go every day.

(Excerpt from His View From Home. Article by Chris Cochran.)

 

Comments (5) Print

Comments

Leave A Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Melaney
March 5, 2020

I have believed for awhile now that there is an upstream family problem manifesting in downstream wrecklessness in our society. When a parent is an alcoholic or drug abuser or dysfunctional in some way, the children end up mimicking the sick behaviors and can be sober doing what the alcoholic/addict does who gets drunk or high……when someone grows up with alcoholism their mental maturity is arrested somewhere in development. Couple with the facts that the human brain does not fully develop until the late twenties. So imagine Susie q grows up with alcoholism. Her emotional, cognitive development is disturbed at a young age. Susie q can’t stand living with and in an addiction atmosphere. So she goes with her immaturity and distorted thinking to look for love in all the wrong places. Surprise. Not. She finds the first derelict who will pay negative attention to her, because she has no self esteem. Desperate for attention she shacks up with the guy. No commitment. Ends up with a baby. And there you have it, the whole scenario repeats itself ALL OVER AGAIN. Generation after generation. Unless Susie q opts for abortion……children having children……Susie q still has no coping skills and continues to behave like a hormonal teenager out of control well into her 60s. Very sad.

It is very commendable that this person is standing up for and encouraging development of morals and values in the home.

Father God, we pray for the restoration, protection and sane development of families and the family unit. And I lift up the families who are currently raising good kids and meet opposition, give them the God kind of strength to overcome any obstacles in their homes. In the mighty name of Jesus AMEN!

5
Jana D.
March 4, 2020

When I read the headline, I thought, “What!?” Then I read the article. What a blessing that there are educators like this one out there. Young people are being lured into child trafficking. Don’t take this lightly.

4
Katherine
March 3, 2020

Holy Father, “Turn the hearts of the children to their parents, turn the hearts of the parents to their young” I pray that parents will set the example and shut off all technology and spend time with their children bringing them up in Your ways. May the be brave enough, strong enough to say “No” no matter how much the children protest. May they remember Parenting is a privilege and a HUGE responsibility. May they look to you, God, for guidance. Bless and keep them strong in your Spirit and your Word. In Jesus name, Amen

12
Ana
March 2, 2020

Amen, amen, and amen!

13
Darlene Estlow
March 2, 2020

Father, help parents to do their job with their children to protect them. Protect our children from the evil that stalks them by opening the eyes of their parents to that evil and give them courage to act.

21

Partner with Us

Intercessors for America is the trusted resource for millions of people across the United States committed to praying for our nation. If you have benefited from IFA's resources and community, please consider joining us as a monthly support partner. As a 501(c)3 organization, it's through your support that all this possible.

Dave Kubal
IFA President
Become a Monthly Partner

Share

Click below to share this with others

Log in to Join the Conversation

Log in to your IFA account to start a discussion, comment, pray, and interact with our community.