Here's why I changed my mind and finally let my kid have a smartphone
Teens
Teens

(Flickr / RansomTech)
I have a confession to make: My son has a smartphone.

That may not seem like a big deal. After all, it's hard to find a teen who doesn't one these days. But it was a major move for our family — and particularly for me.

You see, when my son entered middle school nearly two years ago, I was adamantly opposed to to him having a smartphone. I even went public with my opposition, writing a column about it for the Mercury News.

I was the very picture of the stern, throwback father.

"Sorry son," I wrote in the headline for my piece, "You're not getting a smartphone."

Good intentions

I had good reasons. Most notably, I didn't think he needed one. We live half a block from his school, so we didn't have to worry about coordinating pick-ups. He wasn't involved in any after-school activities on campus, so we didn't need to check-in with him to find out when he would be coming home. And I figured his transition to middle school was going to be overwhelming enough without also having to worry about checking messages on a smartphone.

phone off sign plane
phone off sign plane

(Flickr/Kai Hendry)

But I was also worried by what I knew and had learned about the assorted risks of smartphone use among teens. Cyberbullying, sleep deprivation, texting while driving, addiction -- they all weighed heavily on my mind.

I was further influenced by what I knew about how other kids my son's age were using their phones. My son reported that his friends never seemed to talk with each other at lunch, because they were all consumed with watching videos or playing games on their phones. And the middle school-aged son of my colleague at the time broke every rule she and her husband tried to set to limit his use.

Indeed, my piece was written as a response to this colleague who -- I not so subtly implied -- had been foolish when she got her son his smartphone.

Times change

But things have changed, and I'm the one feeling foolish. Not only does my son have a smartphone, he's actually had one since the beginning of this school year. So much for being the take-charge, in-command dad.

Why does he have a phone now? Well, it started as a practical matter. Instead of coming home immediately after school, he started staying after-hours to work on math. He also got involved in cross-country and started going to meets. We wanted to be able to check in on him. And we needed to be able to coordinate pick-ups.

But we let him keep it long past cross-country season, because it became an important tool for him. He uses it to look up information for his homework. He uses it to take pictures and share them with his friends. It's his link to his social group -- he uses iMessage like I used the landline phone in my room when I was a teen. And he uses it for fun, of course -- playing games, watching YouTube and catching up on pop culture.