T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1261.1 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | be the village | Thu Mar 13 1997 10:11 | 21 |
| Brian,
We have lots of kids in the neighborhood and they all go to school
together, so we see a lot of them. Boundaries. the eleven-year-old
checks in if she is going off our street and block. this is the same
boundary she has had since she was 7. the almost 4-year-old isn't
allowed out of the yard without a sister at this time. However, as she
gets to know Aries up the street and the weather gets good enough for
sidewalk bikes she will be out on the sidewalk with clearance from one
of us. We have extremely small yards, in my part of town so the front
of the house and sidewalks are the place to play when the kids are too
young to go to the park without a parent.
I don't worry much about the kids as when the weather is good enough
for them to be out, there is at least one neighbor on a front porch,
usually more and we all know each other. Frank has been an at home
parent, and there are several others in the neighborhood as well as a
few retired people. If we lived in a bedroom comunity I would probably
feel differently.
meg
|
1261.2 | my thoughts | NAC::WALTER | | Thu Mar 13 1997 12:10 | 39 |
| Our son is only 3 1/2 so we have yet to experience him playing in other
yard in our neighborhood. He has only been allowed over our neighbors
house once and the kids (her grandchildren) had to ask their parents if
it was ok for him to come over. They haven't asked again. Hmmm..
makes me wonder now. :^)
Actually, the norm for our neighborhood is for all of the kids in the
area to come to our home lately. My husband is a kid at heart, and
when Paul is out there is always a parent out with him (most of the
time, his dad because he is working in the yard). We live in a lake
community and the houses are close together and yards are small. Most
of the time its just the houses directly next to our house but I have
seen once or twice some kids further down the road. My husband thinks
its great and make everyone feel welcome. However, I have stressed my
concern that the children make sure their parents know that they are at
our home.
I will be concerned as Paul gets older because we are so close to the
lake. Paul is not allowed to play in the front yard or street at all;
even if the other children are playing in the street, hockey and such.
Most of these kids are older (about 8) but I've seen children as young
as 5 playing in the streets. Although our speed limit is 20 I still
get scared because every once in a while you will see a car drive much
faster than they should. Adults are out in force on weekends doing
yard work so its a pretty safe bet that the kids are going to interact.
Just a small story. Paul last daycare provider has a son who is 8
years old and told his mom that he was playing down the road with a
friend. She asked that he call her when he got there. After he left
she noticed a beat up car going slowly down the neighborhood. After it
circled several times she called the police and reported a suspicious
looking vehicle in the neighborhood. Come to find out this person was
just let out of jail and was pending a child molestation charge and was
loaded with drugs. It happens everywhere and all the time. I'm alot
more cautious then my husband thinks I should be but I feel better safe
then sorry. You never know who is out there, even if they live next
door.
cj
|
1261.3 | Better safe than.. | SUBSYS::SPERA | | Thu Mar 13 1997 12:32 | 9 |
| I have to agree with .2. You never know hwo is out there.
My cousin's daughter attended daycare with a little girl
who was kidnapped right outside her home in Virginia while
her mom ran in to get a sweater for her.
I think a group of children playing outside the backdoor is
ok but I have a hard time with a child going anywhere unsupervised.
My house is within 10 minutes of a major highway so my
thinking is you never know who is just passing through.
|
1261.4 | | DECCXL::WIBECAN | That's the way it is, in Engineering! | Thu Mar 13 1997 14:11 | 7 |
| Thanks for the replies thus far. I take it that your kids, in general:
- have many friends in the neighborhood;
- play outside a lot when home;
- have mostly unscheduled play with nearby kids, as opposed to scheduled
play dates with kids from further away?
Brian
|
1261.5 | | WRKSYS::MACKAY_E | | Thu Mar 13 1997 14:32 | 20 |
|
We live in a family neighborhood, with about 35 houses in a circle
like development, 1/2 acres per lot, with the average of 3 kids per
family. Half of the households have one parent staying home.
I started letting our daughter leave our yard around the age of 6
as long as she was with some other kid and either I or other parents
could see her. When she was 8, she could go around the block with
other kids, as long as she stays inside the development. When she was
10, she could go around the block by herself.
Our neighborhood is considered very safe, as there is always someone
watching. There are also plenty of older kids (middle/high school,
not my daughter is one of the older kids ;-)) hanging out, so it is
hardly quiet during the day. Everyone knows what everyone else's is
going! The police also comes around twice a day to check on things.
Eva
|
1261.6 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | be the village | Thu Mar 13 1997 15:16 | 19 |
|
Brian,
My neighborhood is packed with kids and the kids all walk to the same
school, so they all get to know each other, and the younger siblings
quickly.
Colorado is an outdoor kind of place. We encourage kids to be out in
the sun and wind. One trip in winter to here from Washington DC and he
moved us out where we could get sun year around.
since the kids are around we leave them pretty unscheduled. It works
for all of us. Carrie does occaisionally go to a friends house that
is outside her bike boundaries, and that is scheduled ahead of time,
but for the most part the neighborhood kids are plenty of
entertainment.
As I said, my neighborhood is kid friendly and people friendly, if I
lived in another place it would be different.
|
1261.7 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Spott Itj | Thu Mar 13 1997 15:49 | 46 |
| We live in an excellent neighborhood for kids. My children, girls age 8
and 4, play outside just about every day in good weather. We keep track
of where they are, especially the 4 year old. There is a creek that
runs through our property, and they are as fascinated by it as I was
when I was a child. It's close to the house, and it's not deep, but
they aren't allowed to just traipse off to the creek whenever they
want.
There are a number of children in the neighborhood, and children come
to our yard to play all the time. Our kids also go across the street,
or next door to play as well. With the little one, Niki, we obviously
are more rigorous about supervising. She isn't allowed to go out of the
yard without explicit permission, and if she crosses the street either
my wife or I will make sure the coast is clear and watch her cross.
When she goes up the street to her friend's house to play inside, we
will either walk her or watch her until she gets to her destination and
goes inside. The 8 year old, KC, is allowed considerably more latitude.
She can go across the street by herself (after she lets us know that's
what's she's doing.) We often watch her cross, but it is not mandatory
as it is with her sister.
Niki has a little battery powered Barbie car that she got from her
grandparents. She drives it in the street (because our driveway is too
steep) and will often "drive over to her friend's house." We supervise
this activity, because even though the traffic is fairly low, there are
teenagers living on the street whose friends do not appear to fully
appreciate the dangers of driving fast when children may be about. We
have a yellow warning sign that we put in the middle of the street when
the kids are going to be playing out front for awhile. When we do that,
even the teenagers slow down and pay extra attention. It's definitely
worth having.
My wife was pretty paranoid about letting the kids go outside to play
at first. She'd insist that one or the other of us stay out there with
them and supervise. Now she's relaxed to the point where we can keep an
eye on them from inside the house. I often do yard/outside work when
the kids are out there because it offers me the opportunity to keep
track of them (they can be alarmingly nomadic) and be outside (a bonus
for someone in my profession that also has a great love for the
outdoors.)
I think that the key is unobtrusive supervision. It's a balance between
keeping an eye on the kids without being losing your ability to do
anything else when the kids are outside.
The Doctah
|
1261.8 | answers to your questions | NAC::WALTER | | Thu Mar 13 1997 15:51 | 31 |
| We have only lived in our neighborhood for two years but the main
reason why we moved there was because it was such a safe neighborhood.
The houses are like most other replies in here, ie., 1/2 acre lots and
houses close together. Streets are safe for street hocket and speed
limits are no more than 20 mph. The lake can be an added bonus or not
depending on how you look at it. There is a wonderful town beach and
playground a block from our house.
At this time, Paul only knows the children next door directly to our
house. In fact, he has problems remembering all their names but you
know when they come to one house on our right side because he sees them
and yells "my buddies are here!" until you let him outside. He runs
immediately to the fence and after a few months of them talking over
the fence, they are now beginning to enter our yard and play with
eachother.
The rest of the children in our area seem to either be Paul's age or
about 8-10 years old. The school is right across from the end of our
street so I'm sure the kids know everyone because they have to meet
here each morning.
We try and get Paul out as much as possible during the weekends but its
difficult to get them out when you have two full time working parents
and the days are short and cold (here in Mass anyways). Then on the
weekends its just whenever the kids are out that it becomes play time.
As time goes by, I'm sure we will find ourselves making more scheduled
play dates.
fwiw,
cj
|
1261.9 | | SMARTT::JENNISON | And baby makes five | Thu Mar 13 1997 16:21 | 24 |
|
We live in a kid-filled neighborhood, but I wouldn't call
the actual street kid-friendly.
My kids (3 and 4.75) are allowed to play outside alone, as
long as they stay in the backyard. I can see them from the
kitchen. They play very well together, so they don't tend
to wander from one another, but if one does, the other usually
comes in to tattle.
We allow any kids to play in our yard, but we do not allow our
kids to go to other houses unless a) they've been invited, b)
the parents don't mind. They frequently play with our next-door
neighbors' kids outside, and the parents never mind (much as we
don't). My kids are not allowed to cross the street EVER without
an adult.
The kids are also not allowed to "house hop". I'll never forget
the day that the kids across the street (ages 6-9) headed off
for one kid's house, but ended up elsewhere. Their mother was
frantic trying to search ten houses to find them.
Karen
|
1261.10 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Spott Itj | Fri Mar 14 1997 07:42 | 17 |
| Oh, regarding scheduled play time. When we first moved into the
neighborhood, the neighbors were really high on scheduled play time. So
much so, in fact, that about the only time the kids could play was when
their parents had set a date and time ahead of time and written it in
their calendars. While this may be a reasonable approach when there is
a considerable distance between playmates, it seems kind of silly when
everybody's home and right next door or across the street.
We do have scheduled playtime for Niki. Every other wednesday, she goes
to her friend Deanna's house to play, and on alternating wednesdays
Deanna comes to our house to play. But she lives much too far away for
Niki to walk, so driving is involved and that somehow makes it seem to
make more sense to me.
I don't think I ever had a scheduled play time as a kid (not even
once) so I'm sure that colors my thinking on this virtually foreign
concept.
|
1261.11 | | KOOLIT::BLACHEK | | Fri Mar 14 1997 10:00 | 26 |
| I grew up in a small town in rural Pennsylvania, and was one of six
kids who are only 10 years apart. I too never had a scheduled
playtime--who needed it with so many playmates sleeping in the same
room! We were allowed to go where we wanted by the age of 8 or 9. We
picked wild strawberries, rode our bikes everywhere, went to the
library, investigated abandoned houses (!!), went to the park, and had
fun.
In contrast, I live in Nashua, NH on an extremely busy street (Main
Street, in fact). My backyard is fairly safe because it is so far from
the street and is fenced in on three sides. My children are nearly 3
and 7. My 3 year old son is never outside by himself, because of the
danger of the street. My 7 year old daughter has been outside for a
few moments by herself. Sometimes she'll go next door to play with the
neighbor's kids. But generally, one of the four parents watch while
the kids play. There are very few children in the area, and I'd hardly
call what we have a neighborhood.
In the last year, I've allowed my daughter to play alone outside at my
parents home where I grew up, but my husband is only starting to get
comfortable with this.
It's an interesting contrast to me and something I struggle with
whenever the kids want to play outside.
judy
|
1261.12 | | DECCXL::WIBECAN | That's the way it is, in Engineering! | Fri Mar 14 1997 10:27 | 14 |
| This has been quite interesting, thanks all.
I'm somewhat surprised that nobody else has responded whose kids perhaps don't
spend much of their play time at home, or prefer to play indoors, or don't
enjoy playing with the kids in the neighborhood.
In my neighborhood, there are groups of kids who play together a lot. There's
little intrinsic to the neighborhood that precludes kids playing together,
although I suppose some aspects could make it easier. But I think about where
I grew up in New York City, with thousands of kids in the vicinity, and I had
no friends in my neighborhood, either, so I don't put all that much weight on
proximity.
Brian
|
1261.13 | My kids don't play in the neighborhood either | BOOKIE::PANGAKIS | Tara DTN 381-2433 | Fri Mar 14 1997 10:48 | 19 |
| Brian, my family is like yours.
My children (2 and 6.5) play with each other, by themselves, or with
us. They are never outdoors alone.
We live in at the end of an "executive" neighborhood with large lots.
I think I'm the only working mom that isn't a doctor or lawyer and
everyone has their kids heavily scheduled into various activities.
We just generally like to hang around the house! Plus, we typically
go somewhere (as a family) on the weekends or invite family and friends
over to our house.
My husband feels bad about our kids not having neighborhood buddies,
but with our lifestyle (two parents working full-time) there isn't
time to cultivate that right now!
Tara
|
1261.14 | The dissenter - city dweller! | HOTLNE::CORMIER | | Fri Mar 14 1997 11:01 | 32 |
| I'm one! We live in the city. Our neighbors are nice enough, but their
version of child-supervision does not come close to mine, hence their
kids are a bit unruly. David (7) does not like to play with those
kids. He goes to a city-wide magnet school, so he has a set of
friends from school that live all over the city. He goes to their
houses to play on weekend - they come to ours also. He is also in an
after-school program until 5:30 every day, so he has yet another set of
friends with whom he plays every afternoon and on weekends. One of his
school friends commented once that he was sad because David didn't have
anyone to play with at his house. David's reply was priceless. He said
he didn't want friends near his house to play with, because when he
gets home from the after-school program, he wants some PEACE AND QUIET!
He particularly enjoys playing quietly by himself in the evenings. I
think his day is so jam-packed with activities that he needs to unwind.
He nevers lacks invitations on the weekends, so a non-neighborhood set
of friends actually works out well for us.
When he does want to go outside to play, our yard is totally fenced and
we have 3 early-warning devices (small dogs) out there with him. He can
invite friends into the yard if he likes, but he prefers to invite his
other friends over for schedule play time, rather than have the
neighborhood kids over. Our street is a hill, so he can't really ride
his bike safely. When he wants to ride, we both (or all, if he has a
friend/friends over) go to the park very near the house. I don't know
when I will allow him to cruise the area by himself. He has no reason
to at the moment. If he develops a friendship with another child in our
area, I'll have to play it by ear depending on his maturity level. He
is allowed to walk up to Nana's house (2 houses up on our side of the
street) by himself, but I call Nana and tell her he's on his way. We
both look out the window and watch him. Overkill, probably, but he
doesn't know we are doing this so he can't get indignant and accuse us
of treating him like a baby ; )
Sarah
|
1261.15 | Ours is a nice neighborhood, but Shruthi doesn't play with kids there ..yet | TLE::CHAYA | | Fri Mar 14 1997 12:46 | 26 |
| We live in a nice neighborhood..houses with 1 acre lots and lots of kids! If it
is a nice day out, you'll see kids everywhere - riding bikes, roller blading ,
using their battery powered vehicles etc.
The neighborhood has a large percentage of stay-home mom's and the moms all get
together twice a week or so for 'play-time'. The moms sit together, chat, knit
etc while the kids play together. There's a wide variety in the ages of the
kids in the neighborhood.. we had lots of high school graduations this past
year...including lots of new babies being born.
The neighborhood was what drew us to the house in the first place. We have now
been in this house for a year..but Shruthi(almost 4) knows no other kids in the
neighborhood! We attribute this to the fact that with two full-time working
parents and an active social life, we are hardly at home! We have friends with
same interests and kids the same age as Shruthi! So, during the weekends, we
are almost always not at home! She really hasn't had the opportunity to
meet/play with kids in the neighborhood. I am assuming/hoping this will change
as she starts to go to the same school as some of these kids...
The houses right next to ours don't have small kids..there's a creek in our
backyard and a pond right across the road...so right now, she is not allowed to
go out alone! Sometimes, I have let her play in the backyard where I can keep
an eye on her...once, I let her play in the driveway alone...but that was kind
of scary since I couldn't see her all the time..so no more of that since!
--Chaya.
|
1261.16 | | RDVAX::HABER | supercalifragilisticexpialidocious | Fri Mar 14 1997 13:01 | 26 |
| We live on a busy street too, and there aren't any kids too nearby to
play with [well, there's one next door my daughter's age, but that's
another story]. They both need to either import friends or export
themselves (!), and since our school has grown so large they can't just get
on a bus after school, which makes it a bit tough sometimes. My son,
who is now 13, is now allowed to ride his bike to a friends' house 1
mile away; my concern was because of all the 'disappearances' a few
years ago, not that he wouldln't do it safely. The question I wrestled
with was how to let him know that I trusted HIM, it was someone driving
by that I didn't trust. The kids [my daughter is 9+] are not supposed
to play outside until I get home, if it's a really nice day, or like
earlier this week, we have snow so they wanted to ski, they can go
outside but only in the back of the house. I'd wanted to live in a
neighborhood -- I grew up in one where all I had to do was step outside
and there were lots of kids -- but it just didn't work out.
It's saddening to realize that things have changed so much since we
were kids -- I don't even let my kids wait for the bus alone [yes, even
the 13 yr old, but I walk at 7AM so it doesn't look to the others on
the bus that Mommy's going out _with_ him -- appearances are SO
important!] mostly because of the busy corner, and I do require them to
call once they get in the house after school just to let me know
they're in ok. A still-childless co-worker was teasing me about this
one day -- I just told her to wait till she had kids!
sandy
|
1261.17 | ah, the good ol' days | NAC::WALTER | | Fri Mar 14 1997 14:05 | 24 |
| Isn't it funny how times have changed.
I grew up in Stow MA which at the time didn't have any lights (since
got one in the early 90's but anyways)... we used to ride our bikes to
the Jr. High and then on Friday half days ride to the Shopping Plaza on
117 and then home. Our parents let us do this without a problem and
occasionally on weekends my friends that lived on the West Side of Stow
and I would ride to the Friendlies on 2A in Acton. These roads are so
dangerous now that I don't believe I would even try to ride a bike down
them, never mind a pre-teen. And then of course you have to wonder
what our parents were thinking to allow us to just ride around town all
day without so much as call as to where we were going. Just be home
for dinner was all I remember them telling me.
And even before that age, when I was 7-10 we would play kick the can on
busy Hudson Road. The speed limit is still the same 45 mph but the
cars go by my parents home around 50-55 mph. Granted, we didn't play
"in the road" but we were always running across the street to hide.
I wish many times that things would go back to the simplier days.
cj (who probably sounds much older than she actually is)
|
1261.18 | | WRKSYS::MACKAY_E | | Mon Mar 17 1997 08:14 | 12 |
|
Brian,
Actually, during the school year, my daughter, now 11 1/2,
doesn't play outside that much. There is hardly enough time each
day for school, for homework and lessons/activities. On the weekends,
sometimes she gets together with school friends to work on projects,
the rest of the time is family time. During summer vacation, she
goes to camp, but we usually get home around 6. She gets to stay
out in the neighborhood until dusk.
Eva
|
1261.19 | My girls love outdoors! | ODIXIE::GREGORYC | | Wed Mar 26 1997 14:44 | 12 |
| We live in a "young" subdivision. We do lots of family activities and
the kids are busy with school work and sports, but they always find
time to play with their neighborhood buddies. My girls are 9 and 7-
we live in a double cul-de-sac so not too much traffic. All of the
kids (about 9) are always together playing roller hockey, softball,
dolls, bikes you name it. We are looking forward to this summer one of
the neighbors had a pool put in- that will require adult supervision.
The kids all go from one house to the next- we could go for 2-3 hours
some Saturdays and not see them, but we do know where they are!
Cindy
|