My friend Catrina has a daughter, Elly who is 13, preparing to go to a school that has a Bring Your Own Device policy – known as BYOD to the cool kids (a group Elly certainly wants to be part of).
Catrina asked me what she should do. I’ve jumped through these particular hoops recently – my son needed his own device when he started high school this year. I get the dilemma – do you make your kid happy by buying them exactly what they want (possibly crippling the family budget) or go for the bare minimum and risk it being not quite what they need and outdated within a term?
The answer, as with most such problems, is somewhere in the middle.
Now, unlike many parents, I don’t have a problem with a school implementing a BYOD policy, especially in high school. The world demands our kids know how to use technology, and the way computers can engage reluctant learners or kids with a learning disability is dazzling.
One device per kid offers them freedom to learn and create at their own pace – and it saves barneys at home when they try to bump mum off Facebook.
Just as an FYI, you should know that this post is sponsored by Intel Australia. But all opinions expressed by the author are 100 per cent authentic and written in their own words.
So although I’m a writer with a love of the paper page, my opinion is we need not only be open to technology, but we should embrace it – work out what’s best for our kids, our families and our budget.
But what do we do when kids like Elly see their school’s BYOD policy as a permission to hit up mum for the swishest, coolest, most spec-ed up device on the market? It’s a bit of a minefield – when schools leave it up to us, how do we know what’s needed as opposed to what’s wanted?
Top Comments
If Elly has suggested that she'll go without to help fund her own device then I'd take her up on that. If your friend had more time to help Elly 'save' for the device then they could budget together. Otherwise make a plan so Elly can repay her Mum. How much is Catrina willing to spend (how much is the device Catrina would buy)? What is the difference compared to what Elly wants? Elly pays the difference buy forgoing take-away, pocket money, new clothes and taking on extra responsibilities at home for an agreed and reasonable amount of time. If she re-negs she loses device for socialising and can only use it for school work.
Perhaps the school should choose one device,do a deal with the local retailer so the parents can buy the device at a discounted price.A student should not be disadvantaged because their parents dont have the money for the latest whizz bang device. The Rudd idea was a good one