Wow. It has been a busy year! Also, we're still in a pandemic and it has been a looong haul.
In 2022, I finished my new book, Growing Up in Public (more about that coming soon) and spoke at a ton of schools, conferences and workplaces via zoom and in person. I'm about to be on the road for much of winter and spring 2023 and I'm excited but a little overwhelmed, too.
I had some great conversations with journalists over the course of the year, too. Most recently, CBS Evening News came to a parent talk at Peterson Elementary School in Chicago and then we followed up with an interview in the studio. It was fun hearing from friends and family (turns out more people still watch the evening news than I expected!) and from some school principals including one NYC principal who was up late at night stressing about a digital dilemma and caught the rebroadcast. The chance to sit down with Adriana Diaz was super exciting! She has a young daughter is very curious about keeping kids safe online.
Here's the segment: Phone Safety on CBS News.
As we get ready for the new year, it is a great time to ask yourself:
If you make just one change to your tech habits for next year, what would it be?
This is not another resolution-setting checklist, I promise! It’s easy to get overwhelmed by all of our goals for fitness, better work habits and (for me) home organization. Instead of trying to change everything about your family’s tech habits, perhaps you can reflect on changes you want to make and focus on creating new tech habits that support your life. Just try not to get overwhelmed.
Are we being the best mentors to our kids and modeling tech-positive behavior? For some big ideas on this front, check out my mentorship manifesto. And then come back here and choose just one thing you’d like to work on, for now. Once that’s underway and feels good, you can pick one more thing.
Why just one thing? All the research on human behavior suggests that we can’t change all of our habits at once.
Here are some ideas for checking in as you launch back into school and work in the new year:
If your child received a new tech device over the holidays, you might already be looking to set up some new boundaries and habits. Join Phonewise Boot Camp to work on this in a fun and structured way.
If you prefer to DIY, take a friend to coffee (on zoom or in person) who has a child (maybe a kid a bit older than yours) with a connected device and pick their brain about what they wish they’d known, before they got their kids that device.
Is there anyone in your family who is sick of being tech support? What is some knowledge they could share in a one-time workshop, tip sheet or video that can be other family members can consult the next time your go-to techie isn’t available to troubleshoot?
Would better password hygiene or a password be helpful to your sanity and security? (We use 1 Password)
How is sharing devices and accounts working for your family?
Are there digital subscriptions you no longer need?
Is it time to offer your child a digital “allowance” for digital spending?
For my own family, better password planning, and hygiene are on the agenda in a big way. Kids need to know how to create secure passwords—and how to record them somewhere safe. In our family, one person was reusing passwords in an unsafe way while another was an expert at crafting tough passwords, but bad at remembering them. It was a nightmare!
Where is sharing working and not working? Sharing an Apple ID has been mixed for many families I talk with, with unintended privacy issues (like your kids having access to your email).
It’s always a great time to check on digital subscriptions you can eliminate or downgrade. On the other hand, my spouse and I were frugally sharing a Spotify account, but every time I went to the gym (my primary zone for music), I’d get texts from my sweetie about killing his jams. I was ready for my own big-girl Spotify account instead of sharing with my husband. Just came back from the gym, and it was worth every penny!
Be the kind of digital mentor your family needs
Ever since your kids were little, you’ve come to learn just how much your kids will do what you do, and not what you say. When I work with kids at schools they tell me that they’re observing some of our most unfortunate tech habits. I'm the worse offender, in my family. The good news is that you as a parent are still a top influencer in your child’s life, and you can model mindful tech habits to help set your child up for success with balancing the role of tech in her life.
If the first thing you reach for each morning after your alarm sounds is your smartphone, you’re answering emails during breakfast, and listening to voicemail on the ride to school—think about how these actions, though a mindless part of your day, appear to your child. Consider how you want your family to interact with their tech devices, then, before setting up some new family rules, first explore how you might modify some of your own tech habits.
What are you really doing on there?
While your kid is on their video game console, or on Roblox, ask about what they’re playing. Are they playing with anyone online? If your child is a new social media user, ask about the kinds of accounts they follow. Are they popular brands? Celebrities? Who are their friends? Do they know them in real life? Ask them to show you examples of social media profiles that they think are cool, and others they think are inappropriate. The more that your child can articulate about their standards, the more you’ll know where they need mentorship.
The same is true for you. Your kids will only know what you’re using tech for if you show them and tell them. Feel free to show your kids the presentation you’re building for work, the flyers for the event you’re helping to coordinate, and some news or photos from friends on social media. When you’re open about your own digital life and make your kids a part of the experience, you’ll make it easier for everyone to talk about. Open up the lines of communication early, and make it an ongoing habit to check-in using an approach of curiosity (as opposed to panic.)
Tech intentions for the entire family
While it might be hard to hear, asking your kid to share one of your tech habits that they’d like to see you change can be eye-opening and help you to set and stick to new habits. This is also a great opportunity to revisit what your family’s unplugged time will look like each day and each week. Should everyone stow their phone in the kitchen overnight, or in a parent’s room? Could you all switch your devices to airplane mode starting at dinner time?
Visiting just one habit at a time, you can make small changes, one by one to become a great digital mentor for your child. Bonus: You will probably also feel more focused and less stressed.
Wishing you a healthy, joyful and peaceful new year,
Devorah
PS: Want to share a quick post on Instagram regarding New Year's Tech Intentions?
You are just such a blessing, Devorah. Thank you for all you do. Happy New Year!
Great post, Devorah! I *really need to move my phone charging station away from my bedside, so it's much more difficult to scroll myself to sleep or scroll before getting out of bed. I've resisted doing it b/c my phone is also, you know, my PHONE and I have teenage and young adult children (not to mention elderly parents), but moving my charger to the other side of the room probably won't hurt, would it? I mean, after all, we used to hang phones ON THE WALL!