“I’m Always Available”: Early Adolescent and Parent Perspectives of Parenting through Interactive Technology
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Parent Mediation of Technology
1.2. Family Rules with Technology
1.3. Parent-Teen Communication
1.4. Communication Using Technology
1.5. Family Systems Thinking
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Sample
2.2. Procedures
2.3. Measures
2.4. Analysis
3. Results
3.1. How Parents and Teens Use Interactive Technology Together
3.1.1. Channels for Communication
Well, a good example is my daughter was on a school trip to New York this last week so we were able to keep in contact with each other through, mostly through Snapchat cause we can send pictures and text messages through Snapchat, multiple times a day and I can actually see where she was in the city with the GPS on Snapchat which made it super awesome. I could follow her and I wasn’t even there and I knew where she was.(Parent 7)
Well, honestly, just like, to get ahold of each other, we’ll use, um, Facebook Messenger a lot … That’s, like, the only way my mom can get ahold of me because she doesn’t have a phone number currently, so I talk to her on Facebook Messenger, I talk to her on … email through, like, a thing called Hangouts. Since I don’t live with my mom, we talk a lot more online than I would with my dad because I live with him, and so, we only text.(Teen 6)
3.1.2. Convenient Connection
I mostly just [text] when I need to come home from a friend’s house or something, or if I have a question about something I’m doing. Like, just earlier today, I was making dinner, and I had a question about one of the ingredients, and so I just texted my mom, and I got an answer really quick.(Teen 2)
3.2. Parenting through Interactive Technology
3.2.1. Open Communication
I think just being more involved in their life. I think it helps for them to open up because they will sometimes open up to a text or an email that they may not in person. You know, sometimes things are hard to say or if they have questions they might text it. So I think it really does have an opportunity to help parent and child understand more of one another or their point of view, or just keep more in contact, you know.(Parent 8)
3.2.2. Guidance through Interactive Technology
Since I don’t see my mom very often, I know that sometimes, if she has something to say, or, like, to make a rule, or anything like that, she does it over Facebook Messenger or however she contacts me. I know that my—both of my parents have set boundaries with the things I can do on the Internet and stuff like that.(Teen 6)
3.2.3. Showing Warmth
I’ll send them a little message sometimes, you know, that tells them that I love them and I was thinking about them. You know that they look pretty this morning when I saw them. You know to let them know that I was thinking about them.(Parent 3)
Sometimes I’ll see some sort of fancy little post that someone did and I’ll copy it or share it and tag, you know, one of my kids in it. And then on their birthdays or if something special happens to them, whatever, then I’ll post something for them about it or about them.(Parent 6)
My daughter’s having a hard day or having a hard situation at school I can give encouragement or suggestions or counsel or whatever but otherwise I wouldn’t know about the situation because sometimes by the time they get home they forget to tell you. So, but at school, they will open up at times.(Parent 8)
Um … Well, they’ll ask me questions, like how I’m doing, or if I need something, and, they’ll send me videos and, like, links and stuff. Um … Just, sometimes we’ll have, like, a conversation, so, it’s usually, um … just like … texting, yeah, I guess. Just, it is texting and all that.(Teen 8)
3.2.4. Building Trust
If they’re in trouble for something, if there’s something that they did wrong and they want to talk to me about it, then I want them to be able to come to me so that’s a big part of it. They know that, they know that they can trust me. I established really early on with my older daughters that, you know, lying is not okay, that trust is a two-way street, that communication is a big part of that.(Parent 3)
4. Discussion
5. Limitations
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Tulane, S.; Southwick, A.; Ferguson, M.; Lerma, J. “I’m Always Available”: Early Adolescent and Parent Perspectives of Parenting through Interactive Technology. Youth 2022, 2, 746-758. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth2040053
Tulane S, Southwick A, Ferguson M, Lerma J. “I’m Always Available”: Early Adolescent and Parent Perspectives of Parenting through Interactive Technology. Youth. 2022; 2(4):746-758. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth2040053
Chicago/Turabian StyleTulane, Sarah, Audrey Southwick, Mark Ferguson, and Jaylynn Lerma. 2022. "“I’m Always Available”: Early Adolescent and Parent Perspectives of Parenting through Interactive Technology" Youth 2, no. 4: 746-758. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth2040053
APA StyleTulane, S., Southwick, A., Ferguson, M., & Lerma, J. (2022). “I’m Always Available”: Early Adolescent and Parent Perspectives of Parenting through Interactive Technology. Youth, 2(4), 746-758. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth2040053