The high cost of high-tech teens |
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"One relative of mine sent 6,000 text messages the first month she had a cell phone," Hicks says. "If you send that
many text messages, you're spending way too much time texting."
After you choose a plan, you can also check
online to find out what
parental control features your carrier has. If your carrier isn't listed, options listed by the other carriers will at least give you
topics for conversation.
"Carriers are offering tools to help parents encourage responsible cell phone use as well as protect kids from
questionable content," says Shannon Nix, spokeswoman for CTIA-The Wireless Association.
Set expectations, then check up
Phones are all about communication, so discuss your expectations about texting, minutes used, downloads and other issues with your
child before handing over a phone.
"Talk to the child before getting the phone, about how you expect them to use the features, what you will or won't be
allowing," Anderson says. "But sometimes that discussion comes after they get the first bill."
Then, check up on your child. "You can dial in and check, log in and check, or do it right on the phone itself," Anderson
says. "If your child hasn't had a cell phone before, checking on how the phone is used is a very good idea."
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| Drawing the line on high-tech costs |
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Determine an age limit
Set an age or school grade for when your child can get a cell phone. At $20 a month, that's an extra $240 in your savings account
every year that you delay. In Hicks' family, each child gets a cell phone the summer before freshman year in high school. "I don't
want a cell phone that lands in my wash," she says. "That's where a sixth-grader's cell phone goes."
Blinkoff advocates waiting as long as possible. "There's no need for the kids to have the things they have at the ages
they have them," he says.
Limit usage by paying in advance. "Get a pay-as-you-go phone, not one that is on anybody's family plan," says a wiser
Ellen. "Once you run out of those minutes, they're gone. I don't think kids today see things as being 'gone.' They think, 'we can go
buy some more. We can get unlimited.' That's sending the wrong message, that everything is free."
Make them pay
Clear up that "everything is free" idea and be frank about costs. "My kids used to say, 'but the cell phone is free,'" Hicks says. "They
were truly surprised that I had to sign a contract and pay every month. We can't put our kids in a bubble and have them not know about
the costs of things."
Have your child foot the bills for any extras, whether cell phone minutes or games or designer clothes. For some reason,
$20 of a child's own money is worth more than $20 out of mom's or dad's wallet.
"Allowance really does help," Jalajas says. "I'll say, 'That will cost 20 weeks of allowance.' My policy is: I'm your
mother and I will provide you with everything you need: food, clothes, a home. Anything above and beyond that, which includes video games,
you'll pay for yourself."
Buy pre-loved items
Jalajas' son, who used to insist on all new books and games, now realizes he can buy a used computer game for $10 or the same game, new,
for $35. The Mathesons also shop for used games for their Nintendo Wii, often trading in old ones for credit. "It's a rarity we'll buy a
brand-new game," she says.
A friend in deed
Friends can make a difference in encouraging or curbing materialism. One of Jalajas' son's friends is an only child with a nice bedroom,
a cell phone, an iPod, a big-screen TV in the basement and more. "He comes home and says, 'How come I have to share a room with my brother?'"
Jalajas says.
But a new friend has made Jalajas' son more appreciative of what he has. "He came home and said, 'Do you know he has to
share a room with his three sisters?'" she says. "We need more of those friends."
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