Gen Alpha is DOOMED and Nobody is Talking About It!!! (ipad kids, gentle parenting, low test scores)

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 20 ก.ย. 2024
  • Gen Alpha is the generation born after year 2010 and people have noticed a major difference in this generation compared to past generations that isn't exactly positive. From their low test scores, rapid aging, short attention span, and so much more...the people are talking!! In this video, we will be discussing why Gen Alpha is doomed!!
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    Music by Vinlisa - Stuck on You - thmatc.co/?l=2...
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ความคิดเห็น • 8K

  • @morganozanne5819
    @morganozanne5819 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +20772

    I feel like Gen Z has collectively decided after seeing Gen Alpha to severely limit the technology access our future kids will have, so I’m interested to see how that all plays out over time.

    • @helenacohen2185
      @helenacohen2185 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2897

      I fully believe that our kids will be nowhere near as bad as these kids. We grew up having access to the internet as tweens/teens and know the horrors of the internet when left unchecked. Millennials didn’t have that experience, so they’re ignorant to exactly what they’re letting their children consume. We also grew up with a much better balance of electronics and real life, so we will better know how to implement that same balance with our kids.

    • @LunaKushG
      @LunaKushG 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1474

      As a 28 year old with a 9 and 12 year old that can read/write/function…
      I can say I think the difference is 1. No matter how much they have begged they don’t get social media accounts. 2. I’ve never been a parent to give a kid an iPad or screen 3. I’m active in their lives and schooling, I talk to their teachers and help with homework and ask questions. 4. There’s consequences to everything. If you don’t act right you get consequences to that, if you act right you get consequences for acting right - however we are always learning.
      I’m so proud of my kids, and I hope one day they understand why I haven’t let them have social media accounts. When I was their age I was online unsupervised, it was way different then, but when I was their age I remember thinking I felt so much older than I was.. and I was on mental health meds at age 9. My kids are kids… they are so happy and I really got to account that to not letting social media pressure weigh on them as well as being active in their life.
      I haven’t been a perfect mom, but I hope I’ve set them up with a good foundation. And with all these videos popping up.. it sounds like they are on the right path.

    • @SheilaPatterson
      @SheilaPatterson 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +433

      I bet it’s going to branch out into two extremes. We might even call them Gen Alpha and Gen Analog

    • @carmindi5061
      @carmindi5061 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@helenacohen2185millennials (born in the 90s) did experienced the internet during late tweens and adolescence though…
      The math ain’t mathing ..

    • @taylorswiftsgrabbablewaist
      @taylorswiftsgrabbablewaist 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +706

      While Gen Z knows what to do for their kids, they also need to limit themselves and their own screen time. We should teach ourselves then have kids, and when we have kids, be sure to teach them what we know now. We have to set a good example as well.

  • @MoralGovernment
    @MoralGovernment 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +5160

    I'm a parent. I'm in my late 30s and my kids are elementary aged. It is HARD to parent right now. I even had a nurse ask me how I get the kids to bed without an iPad because she had a child the same age and she wouldn't go to bed without an iPad. And I was so confused. We just don't give them iPads, we read them a story. She acted like that option had never occurred to her. I have so many bizarre experiences like this.

    • @Whoisthatns
      @Whoisthatns 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Then it’s obvious these new parents are lazy and are disconnected nothing new. I think technology is just exposing bad parenting

    • @hiya511
      @hiya511 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +365

      Crazy right! Library is free and books are free. I have ADHD and dyslexia I am behind have always been behind I'm almost 30 and I don't want my daughter's to struggle like I did in in school. My daughter is 2 and next one due in April ♥️ time to bring back kids being kids and learn through play and read with them and nurture their bodies and minds! ♥️♥️♥️♥️🙌

    • @x77punk77x
      @x77punk77x 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      If a nurse thinks that way, that says a lot about the current crop of “parents.” Idiots.

    • @darkstarr984
      @darkstarr984 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +169

      I’m shocked. Reading a story is so nice. My parents wouldn’t do that “because you know how to read, and you just stay up all night reading if you do.”

    • @Thehistorygeographyandflagnerd
      @Thehistorygeographyandflagnerd 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +74

      I’m an 11 year old gen z and I do have an iPad but I’m not as obsessed as my gen alpha little demon,he is obsessed like he is attracted to it like a fing magnet 🧲 I know how to crochet knit and sew I know how to do a lot of stuff cuz of tutorials on TH-cam lol

  • @junkoe119
    @junkoe119 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4240

    I'm a parent, and my oldest told me he was the best reader in the class. He's 7, and he can read a bit above grade level. I was shocked when his teacher broke it down, and she asked me what I did at home. I told her that we read each day, he reads his own books out loud, I have him write the alphabet in both upper and lowercase and that we write panagrams. We do math throughout the day, like at the store. Being a parent is hard, but we made the choice to have these kids. We can't fail them on an intellectual level, and the fact that so many are is beyond sad. It takes as little as 45 mins to do the bare minimum.

    • @auroradeuel39
      @auroradeuel39 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +215

      We need more of you

    • @c4tac133
      @c4tac133 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +152

      I’m going to take this advice as someone with little cousins (no older than 5) I see weekly. Whenever they come over, I notice that everyone in my house is either on their phones, in their rooms, or ‘babysitting’ by doing the prior with the kids around. No shade to them because most are adults, especially the parents who need a break, but I find myself being the only one who genuinely hangs out with them. We draw, build legos, read books or play hide and seek, and even if the TV is on I’ll sing the nursery rhymes with them and try to be present so they don’t rely more on what’s playing than socializing and having fun. My little cousins are turning into iPad kids (they already have phones and use them a lot of the time on their own) but I’m glad that they’re at the point where if I sneak the phone away and we do something else they don’t fuss. Nowadays, when everyone has settled down after the first minutes of everyone greeting each other (my family and their family) they tend to gravitate towards me, and that honestly keeps me motivated to be present even when I’m very tired. I had barely gotten sleep one time they came over and ran to my room, and even though I just wanted to keep watching TH-cam by myself, I found myself playing catch with them from my bed and showing them how to use a fidget spinner because the fact that they genuinely wanted to play with me because it made them happy touched me. Kids just need someone to be there and engage with them, so they know that there are ways to have fun beyond their iPads

    • @vanillasmootae3575
      @vanillasmootae3575 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +37

      This is exactly what I used to do with my mom and teacher at school! I would write and read so well that the teacher made me read my stories and hold presentations on different topics such as religion and history in front of the parents🤭

    • @raisin-kj5vh
      @raisin-kj5vh 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      we need more parents like you

    • @MsArrika
      @MsArrika 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

      This is completely my vision for my son. He's only 8 months. Almost 9 but it w las mentioned the earlier you read with your kids and the more often, they have a better chance of doing well in school. Unfortunately my husband is far too go with the flow. We both are millennial I guess, 93 and 94. I don't pay a lot of attention to the whole "generational labels" thing but his style of parenting is absolutely more of the typical "iPad" parenting I keep hearing about. It's frustrating and a little troubling for me to try and.imagine how im supposed to ensure my son is responsible, respectful, mindful, etc. When dad is just going through the motions. At this point I just constantly have developmental informational youtube videos in his ear and hoping and praying the information get through that stubborn skull of his. I can't be totally mad with him since I know exactly why and who is responsible for the way he is but it really feels like raising two children rather than one.

  • @haleighstockton5439
    @haleighstockton5439 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1741

    That sweet ballet instructor had me crying with her. Bless her for caring so much for these babies.

    • @LumineGenshinCrochetHOLY
      @LumineGenshinCrochetHOLY 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      She's bad at her job. I was taking care of kids for 7 years, worked in a hotel kidsclub. I did theatre and dance practice from monday to friday. I had kids age 3- 12. And at times I had 20 kids to teach the dance choreo and make sure nobody falls of the stage. And everyone listened cause I was taught by my coworkers on how to do it.
      You have to have the right tone that is strict, not high. Never shout at them cause then you loose their respect.
      Also you don't ask them to do things you tell them to.
      And make rules for certain words or phrases to not be used during your programs. I had up to 30 kids to teach our ctafting programs and I managed.
      I wouldn't listen to that ballet teacher to, she's to insecure, you have to look and sound confident.
      I had way worse kids, like a boy interupting my games constantly, using swearwords, talking about SEX (he was 9 btw) and that was a problem when you have small kids there. He just went to hotel with his grandpa and that man said it's normal for kids. I've had to talk to crazy parents and stay calm and proffessional and smile smile smile cause in hotel the guest is king.😂
      We had a boy strangeling another kid, or kids that pumched others.... it isn't allways easy to get thouse to listen. But when someone says like your not my mum
      I'd say 'I am your dance teacher and if you want to partake dancelessons you are not allowed to say that. "
      And to the parents you explain that you are the one who has responsibility of every kid during dance lesson.

    • @mankindsbadhabit7546
      @mankindsbadhabit7546 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +184

      @@LumineGenshinCrochetHOLY Please tell me what she was meant to do. If the PARENTS don't care, what makes you think a ballet teacher will suddenly get to them. They don't listen to ANY authority. Point blank.

    • @commonshem3627
      @commonshem3627 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@LumineGenshinCrochetHOLY Of course knowing how to act to earn respect is important in dealing with kids, some have to learn it, some are born with it. But as a teacher, its not your job to raise kids. Your job is teaching them a skill, giving them knowledge. Yes, some life lessons can be learned in class, some kids are more unruly than others, club-like activities and sports will teach kids a lot. Good teachers help shape a lot of a kid's future, but it all starts at home. I myself am a 22 year old ballet instructor and that girl really reached to me. I too struggle with gaining the children's respect sometimes as my not used to being an authorative figure, but im learning. But even with that, i can DISTINCTLY differentiate between kids acting unruly, running around, talking, screaming because they see me as being easy to step over for lack of a better expression, and kids whose parents havent thought them essential behavioural rules and manners and respect.
      Luckily i dont get such kids often, and if i do, there is always a change a few months in. But that only happens because we work with the parents as well. Telling them the issues we see and letting them talk it out is what does it.

    • @illenagus
      @illenagus 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +64

      She made me so sad! I would have said CLASS IS OVER and calling are the parents to get their kids as I go cry in the bathroom.

    • @GreenBlue8840
      @GreenBlue8840 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@mankindsbadhabit7546 This

  • @j.k.8811
    @j.k.8811 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3865

    I just quit my job as a preschool teacher because of the kids. I have been bit, kicked, spit at, hit, given a black eye. It wasn’t worth it for me to be burnt out at the end of the day for my own son. The way these parents allow their kids to act/speak to people is INSANE.

    • @sadielovesjesuss
      @sadielovesjesuss 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +417

      i work at a preschool as well. i get hurt on a daily basis and the amount of times i hear the f-bomb come out of these children’s mouths a day is ridiculous.

    • @aintthatthetruf9752
      @aintthatthetruf9752 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +223

      Preschool was an elective my school offered. I can’t say that I blame you for leaving. The constant cursing, fighting, disrespect, and the fact that the parents didn’t see anything wrong with their kids behavior was insane. It’s not worth it.

    • @gma904
      @gma904 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +205

      All our prisons are going to be FULL and new ones building if the parents don’t get and teach some decorum.

    • @nickyannajones
      @nickyannajones 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +60

      School was like this when I went to school in South Central in the 80s and kids were beginning like that in jr high. I knew then I never wanted to go into teaching. My hands are too quick

    • @nickyannajones
      @nickyannajones 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

      Also I'm sorry that was your experience. Maybe you can be a private teacher but yeah, your son comes first

  • @thenotsoamazinggracetnsag3463
    @thenotsoamazinggracetnsag3463 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +8539

    It’s not gentle parenting it’s neglectful parenting.

    • @user-jn4oe9sb5z
      @user-jn4oe9sb5z 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +886

      Parents on both sides forget this: Gentle parenting requires discipline. Neglectful parents claim theyre gentle so they can not raise their kids. And abusive parents that these parents are examples and say thats why gentle parenting doesnt work

    • @Rosierose902
      @Rosierose902 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +556

      Thank you! I hate when people blame gentle parenting. Like babes y’all aren’t parenting at ALL 😢

    • @jupiterthree5228
      @jupiterthree5228 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +184

      It's what happens when people who didn't actually want kids had kids. There are a lot of regretful parents out there.

    • @oddgamingcat7442
      @oddgamingcat7442 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +279

      Exactly. If you were actually gentle parenting you would still punish your kid for being bad by giving them related punishments (For example, not hitting your child for accidently breaking a pot and instead make them clean up after themselves and use it as a learning opportunity to teach your kid not to be reckless in the house) and to set boundaries to your kid. Neglectful parents just let their kids do whatever and uses the words 'gentle parenting' as a pass to do so.

    • @nuggets8229
      @nuggets8229 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +91

      I think that term is just used a lot by neglectful parents who do NONE at all so it’s generalized and used in an even ironic way in the title but thanks for spreading the info! More ppl should know ts

  • @_.-_
    @_.-_ 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2847

    The key part of gentle parenting is gentle PARENTING. You must actually parent. Some people say theyre doing gentle parenting whilst really just doing permissive parenting

    • @rosy_cookie143
      @rosy_cookie143 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +148

      I can't tell you the ammount of times it infuriates me when i hear these millennial "parents" say "oh yeah i'm doing gentle parenting!" No ma'am/sir. You are not. You're not telling you kid no and why your no is a no.

    • @_.-_
      @_.-_ 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +73

      @@rosy_cookie143 right, like actually an important part of gentle parenting IS telling ur kid no (when they need to be. Another part is considering if the no is just because of an unecessary norm or something else that's not actually a problem). But like telling your kid no is not a bad thing! It's a learning experience! And part of gentle parenting is also TEACHING your kid that 'no' is not a bad thing, that you can discuss, that there is reasoning behind the decisions people hand out. And that yes, sometimes you still might not like or completely agree with that reasoning, but being able to articulate your feelings and your parent being able to make you feel like your thoughts matter, even if they still explain why you can't do that, is invaluable. Just. Ughhhh permissive parenting is damaging!!! I just want to shake some of them and tell them like, yes, it IS super hard work to be a parent and to constantly put that effort in. But you signed up for it. You decided to be a parent. So do that.

    • @whenimmanicimgodly4228
      @whenimmanicimgodly4228 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +78

      This. People seem to misunderstand gentle parenting and enact it badly,gentle parenting is 100% the way to go, but permissive parenting should be avoided entirely.

    • @alicehellstrom7616
      @alicehellstrom7616 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +29

      Exactly. They say that they are doing gentle parenting but the fact is that they’re doing FAILED gentle parenting. My parents did gentle parenting with me and my siblings but we have respect for them and have none of the behavioural problems that gen Alpha has

    • @orange_turtle3412
      @orange_turtle3412 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Shoving an ipad in front of your kids and letting the scumbags on the internet raise them is not parenting. As a parent, you decided to raise children. You committed your life to raising them. So fucking raise them.

  • @_xoxoSoleil
    @_xoxoSoleil 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +569

    The kid singing the peaches song from mario was so cute and innocent 🥹🥹🥹 keep him pure at ALL COST!! 💓💓💓.

    • @devinreis5811
      @devinreis5811 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +33

      That was so cute and so funny.

    • @theprincessnay
      @theprincessnay 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

      I sang along with him 🥹 my niece loves it

    • @CheshireMar2
      @CheshireMar2 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      The only one that made me happy 😢❤

    • @lmborfs8654
      @lmborfs8654 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      and the baby that chose the alphabet 🥹

    • @subplzorideleteurchannel7193
      @subplzorideleteurchannel7193 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      The one that chose “Favorite Song” was okay if that’s all he’s heard. I hope he’s on the innocent side like I was as a kid listening to Incubus and 311 trying to be “cool” and “grown up” like my dad.

  • @sombravulpes
    @sombravulpes 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4722

    Im 19. In school, I was *MADE FUN OF* for acting like a preteen, since my parents still raised me like one. Everyone in my class, though, was intensely vain and criticized me for not being “mature”, when I was literally in 8th grade. It’s not just the parents and social media; kids are encouraging it to each other.

    • @Teawisher
      @Teawisher 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +413

      It's so silly and sad how people are almost never the "right" age. At first you wanna instantly skip to 21 or smt and then you are already "too old" almost instantly.
      I'm 35 and it's wild how so many people way younger than me feel old, like wtf :D
      Mammals learn by playing so it would be important to have a long enough childhood that isn't just trying to be an adult.

    • @TheWishDragon
      @TheWishDragon 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +192

      The most childish behaviour of them all is brigading and bullying people based on their percieved maturity or lack of especially when you're all kids, that includes posturing or trying to prove how mature you are. I'm a random stranger on the internet but I'm glad you were not one of those.

    • @jingle1833
      @jingle1833 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +35

      I HAVE THE SAME PROBLEMM

    • @komaedakat1583
      @komaedakat1583 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +106

      Thats wild.. kids should be able to act like kids and not expected to act mature..

    • @Gwaciee
      @Gwaciee 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +88

      @@Teawisheri’m 19 as well and will often hear my peers and friends discussing how old they feel and how they wanna be young again and it’s baffling lol

  • @SummerDon
    @SummerDon 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3052

    I agree with everythinggggg. Parents are becoming extremely lazy with kids because a lot of them are having kids to have babies, not to raise actual people.

    • @jenesishunter9674
      @jenesishunter9674 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +34

      Unpopular Opinion: To have a Consistent Bag, without having to work a regular 9 - 5. 😕👎

    • @drillingig2368
      @drillingig2368 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +42

      @@jenesishunter9674??? We get that but how is that relevant?

    • @cyanthrope
      @cyanthrope 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +81

      to be fair, that's not exactly a new phenomenon

    • @KangwithoutaKangdom
      @KangwithoutaKangdom 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@jenesishunter9674 kids are exoensive and average CS is 430 a month. No one is having kids for this reason, men are just delusional and like to pretend that's whats happening

    • @MsLolaTaylor
      @MsLolaTaylor 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      Underrated comment

  • @Mosespilled
    @Mosespilled 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1598

    Honestly REAL gentle parenting isn’t that bad, it’s just that people nowadays are disguising neglectful parenting as gentle parenting

    • @susanrichardson631
      @susanrichardson631 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +62

      It's the excuse they use to not do the parenting they know they should be doing.

    • @Jhuliz
      @Jhuliz 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +109

      Ya, I don’t understand why Gentle parenting is on this list. She probably means permissive parenting or neglectful parenting. Kids shouldn’t have all these issues if more parents were following REAL gentle parenting or authoritative parenting, kids would be better behaved.

    • @lorenzob19
      @lorenzob19 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +67

      Exactly my thoughts. Gentle parenting is supposed to validate emotions to prevent causing trauma on children. However, it’s also supposed to firmly guide children to good behavior and teach them proper behavior. Another important part: the parent is supposed to be the primary example!

    • @x77punk77x
      @x77punk77x 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Honestly, “parenting” is a very generous term for what ignoramuses raising even more outrageous ignoramuses are doing now…

    • @bizzyg5751
      @bizzyg5751 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

      It's not gentle parenting, or even responsive parenting. It's mostly permissive parenting (which is horrible), paid parenting (which is worse), or fatigue parenting (which takes the cake). Gentle parenting, when properly implemented, yields sensible, disciplined, trained kids. But another problem I'm seeing with people turning to gentle parenting is that they start too late. Obviously, gentle parenting will be more effective on a 0-5 year old than a 6-11 year old. You either start young or you use responsive parenting instead. To be frank, as long as no one is neglecting the emotional and mental needs of their children, I don't see anything wrong with Authoritative parenting either.

  • @emajaneee
    @emajaneee 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +137

    as a younger gen z (2009), im so scared for the worlds future- like its so concerning how much technology is affecting people, especially gen alpha. i’ve started observing closer at the people around me and realized that everyone (not just gen alpha) is completely absorbed by their devices (including myself) and it looks really abnormal to see everyone constantly have a screen in front of their eyes and headphones in rather than actually acting like humans. gen alpha is the most affected by this because these kids are being raised on ipads. this is so terrifying.

    • @workinprogress8340
      @workinprogress8340 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      The world is honestly scary but I’m gen z (2005), and I have hope for our generation I think that our generation is gonna be alright now gen alpha I don’t know about them I think there some good ones who are gonna be ok but there gonna have to fight for there lives so turn out ok.

    • @halley8105
      @halley8105 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      The issue is that it's an addiction, and addictions are hard to cure. But there is definitely a chance to turn things around and fix things

    • @skykat1525
      @skykat1525 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I am a younger gen z kid as well(2009).
      I get where you are coming from!

    • @Shahrbanoali01
      @Shahrbanoali01 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      idk if i'd be gen z but 2010 born

  • @brih5002
    @brih5002 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1437

    I hate that the automatic clapback for people saying that kids listen to inappropriate songs is that we listened to inappropriate songs too when we were there age. While that’s not wrong, we were listening to heavy INNUENDOS and had no idea what we were singing. I didn’t realize what Candy Shop was about until I was like 12. Modern songs are so much more straightforward and graphic which makes it easier for them to make the connection earlier, especially if the parents speak in the same manner.

    • @ToniBryanneTV
      @ToniBryanneTV  9 หลายเดือนก่อน +450

      Thank you!!! The lyrics were subliminal versus how blatant they are today. There was a HUGE difference

    • @manwhoismissingtwotoenails4811
      @manwhoismissingtwotoenails4811 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +190

      Yeah if you compare like lady Gaga or Britney Spears to Ice Spice or Cupcakke they sing about the same things but one is obviously different.

    • @gma904
      @gma904 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Female artists are an unashamed example of zero class and decorum. There is no condemnation in it and the kids are paying attention.

    • @jinx6946
      @jinx6946 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      Parenting problem

    • @Zeburaman2005
      @Zeburaman2005 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +64

      @@jinx6946Not just parents, the whole of society is giving the wrong example. Growing up in the 80s and 90s was a whole different story than growing up in the age of smartphones and social media. Even if it could be argued that a lot of the values and rhetoric held by authority figures 30-40 years ago were pure lip service on their part, the fact remains that we didn’t really have the means of unmasking them. Add a complete lack of any believable authority figure in today’s society, celebrities and influencers constantly preaching the normalisation of insane behaviours, gentle slapping counting as child abuse, and greedy tech giants happily taking over child rearing to create lobotomised consumers, and suddenly parenting starts looking like a much harder job than before, specifically for those struggling with their income.

  • @Samistheheroo
    @Samistheheroo 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1830

    I'm of the older half of Gen Z(I'm 24), and my husband and I have made it VERY clear to our family that we are not allowing phones or tablets to be put in front of our child on the regular. We basically want her to be raised the way we were- spending most of the time using imagination, playing with actual toys, and spending tons of time outside. We plan on homeschooling as well.
    Children are being failed by society. Education desperately needs to become a priority in our country.

    • @Spyritic
      @Spyritic 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +72

      That's the thing, not everyone has the time or money for homeschooling which can make it really hard for these kids to not be failed by society. You could decide not to give your kid access to the internet, but still see that they're getting affected by it because of their friends at school. Even when homeschooled, when they go to socialise with other kids they might be influenced by them and the internet just like they would be at school... so really it feels like a lost cause. But good job putting effort to be a great parent and trying to be included in your child's life, not enough parents have been doing that lately!

    • @younce-davis952
      @younce-davis952 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +36

      I am your age, and I am super scared to send my kids to a school that isn't an online program. I know quite a few people my age who did k-12 through a certified, online program, so I am seriously considering that option.

    • @Misspnklips
      @Misspnklips 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      @@younce-davis952I just think you have to spend time with them, know your child
      Make them feel comfortable enough to tell you things they go through
      Being strict parents will always make them want to hide things
      I have several examples of both sides

    • @Itshollymoon
      @Itshollymoon 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +33

      I’m 28 and stuck financially unable to even think about marriage or kids so it shocks me that Gen Z has kids now. I feel so stuck in time. It tripped me out to read the word husband because I’m sitting here feeling like I’m not even old enough to be on my own let alone married. But yeah… I’m glad we Zillenials/older Gen Z have a decent hold on the tech addiction and hopefully more morals than these shit parents we’re talking about.

    • @lacied4020
      @lacied4020 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Wrong, if you homeschool they will not get influenced by the internet and as far as other children go...thats why most of us wont be allowing children to stay the night with our kids or our kids to stay the night with other kids unless their parents also do no believe in letting kids have access to the internet etc,as long as you watch every little thing your child does and who they interact with than you have full control over what they are introduced to.@@Spyritic

  • @maryalicefike4704
    @maryalicefike4704 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2738

    as a nanny there is a HUGE difference in the cognitive development of my kids that got an ipad at 2, and my kids that watch disney plus less than an hour a day. the lack of ability to play is what i notice most. if you ask an ipad kid to go play outside for thirty minutes they will stand there not knowing what to do and begging for the ipad or for me to come up with what they should play (they’re over kindergarten age they should know how to play outside???!!!)

    • @SweetTooth1102
      @SweetTooth1102 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +457

      Lack of play is detrimental for children's development. I really hope parents start taking more of an initiative for their child's creativity, intelligence, and future.

    • @mimienchanted9339
      @mimienchanted9339 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +245

      Its honestly heartbreaking!!! I remember being elementary age and spending hours in my backyard running around playing by myself, if not with my sibling. Its disturbing to think kids have so little imagination now they can't even play or make believe without being prompted

    • @musettae
      @musettae 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +149

      ⁠@@mimienchanted9339 so true! I was born in 1997 and my parents were busy surviving hard times so I had to basically “raise” myself. Having 0 exposure to technology I could literally spend hours outside on my own, imagining different games and role playing. After that I would draw, read and write stories. So, the parents’ being way too busy is not an excuse to just give their baby an iPad and leave

    • @Beebob2374
      @Beebob2374 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@mimienchanted9339honestly my brother is 10 and all he does is watch tik tok at 10 I was OUTSIDE 😩

    • @Forever5elena
      @Forever5elena 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      That’s so sad

  • @Sammythat_B
    @Sammythat_B 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +285

    My grandparents are from the "greater generation" I always thought they were the silent gen.
    One day my son came home& told me that he was mad his teacher was telling him what to do, cuz she's not his parent. I told him, that when he's at school, his teachers are in charge& he needs to listen. It doesn't matter if they aren't your parent. As your parent, I'm telling you that you need to follow directions while in school.

  • @aaabbbya
    @aaabbbya 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2807

    The biggest problem is parents giving children unrestricted access to the internet! Lazy parenting is at a all time high. It is very possible to limit a child’s screen time and to monitor it- even if you work full time and have an extremely busy schedule

    • @DeLaTr0ll
      @DeLaTr0ll 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +114

      I can’t speak for all but that’s not the case.
      Half the things we did as kids is frowned upon.
      When my kids go outside to play people complain about the noise or call the police when kids are outside playing.
      It’s not all the millennials kids or Gen alphas fault.
      All previous generations are playing a role in this.

    • @lilyfoster6605
      @lilyfoster6605 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +75

      literally parental controls exist, watch something before your kids watch it and block it if you don’t like it.

    • @BasuraVidz
      @BasuraVidz 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      ​@@DeLaTr0ll😂😂😂😂

    • @AmberColeman-gq1wn
      @AmberColeman-gq1wn 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Yessss

    • @SP-dy8sm
      @SP-dy8sm 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +43

      As a kid who prefers be classified as gen z (I’m 12) with a technology addiction, it is hard for parents who have a full work schedule to limit their kids, my mom is single and works full time, so she has little control over me and my little gen alpha technology addicted little sister. It’s , a problem but it’s not always the parents fault

  • @Horridhenry27
    @Horridhenry27 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +974

    I worked as a camp counselor this summer, and I quit only 2 weeks in.
    I was screamed it, punched, called slurs, degraded by parents, students, and coworkers. This issue is kids think they can boss people around, because there parents and peers do the same. I spent 20 minutes trying to convince a 7th grader to sit down!!! Aside from that, I was sexually harassed by the male children. I had to report the same child for prompting self harm over 3 times before she got the help she needed. I used to love working with kids, but I’ll never do it again now. This was Traumatic.

    • @B_addie
      @B_addie 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +137

      I’m concerned about the kids who don’t participate in this kind of behavior, they must feel so isolated in all of that, and I can imagine the peer pressure when it’s so overwhelming even for adults.

    • @Horridhenry27
      @Horridhenry27 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +112

      @@B_addie yes!!! Well behaved children would act different around other kids. A boy would draw and pick flowers with me when his friends weren’t there, but when they were he would say genuinely disturbing things about me. Very scary, since good kids and changing for the worst!!

    • @coraobear
      @coraobear 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +51

      Omg its actually insane. I'm a 2010 and don't consider myself a gen alpha its fine if u do. But I was raised to be respectful to everyone, even other kids. Last year I was in a kindergarten class watching them during their lunch break and some of the kids kept putting their hands up my skirt. Like what the hell, you're five years old..

    • @Horridhenry27
      @Horridhenry27 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      @@coraobear that’s terrible! Hope your doing okay!

    • @Ivy30
      @Ivy30 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@B_addie My sister born in 2010 tells me she's seen kids in grades below her and that they're some fucking atention seeking weirdos, literally I mean, ppl neither of us would be friends with, like take some accountability they're the cringiest human beings I've seen, since 2012 kids, everything has been becoming worse

  • @Doxygurl
    @Doxygurl 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1430

    This issue has been a long time coming though. I’m a younger millennial who went to middle school between 2005-2008, ages 10-13, and was BRUTALLY bullied by my peers for acting like a child and being a good student. It wasn’t uncommon for kids to be having sex lives and smoke cigarettes or even use harder drugs. I just feel like those same unparented kids who made my life hell in school grew up, had kids themselves and gave them unfettered access to the internet. 💀

    • @britbrat1127
      @britbrat1127 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +62

      PREACH

    • @blackjackdaw7865
      @blackjackdaw7865 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +106

      Relatable. I never understood my peers trying to act like adults so badly yet being so imature at the same time.
      I'm now an adult gen z, and I remember this one girl from the same year as me sudenly droping out of school because she got pregnant and had a kid.
      WE WERE 12 YEARS OLD.
      A PRIMARY SCHOOL DAMMIT!

    • @teoleno4019
      @teoleno4019 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Exactly, as a millenial who was a good student, I can tell you, all the "promiscuous girls/hoes" and bullies from my high school had kids and gen alpha are the result.

    • @glorii3
      @glorii3 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +34

      I'm currently a Gen z in high school and the same thing is still happening. You're friends with everyone if you have a "body count " and labeled as boring if not

    • @malenatorres8613
      @malenatorres8613 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +33

      I'm a sophomore (4th grade high schooler in Argentina) and i always get the feeling that i'm not part of my classmates (i neither want to be part of them because how they are). Sometimes i'm being criticize about how i act like a TEENEGER when i'm literally about to be a 16 year old. They are always wanting to be adults, going to partys, getting drunk, being in drugs, smoke, having sex, betting and they listen to a type of music that is TERRIBLE. Musicians here are always singing about sex and drugs and the kids and teenegers are taking that songs as aspirational to be in life. They dress the same, they talk the same, act the same. You can't go to the beach without hearing that stupid songs everywhere.

  • @oatmealpacket
    @oatmealpacket 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +96

    i am an elementary school teacher and it is so scary. i recently had to email parents about their child completing NO work the entire day, even the work we did as a class which all he had to do was copy down. the BARE MINIMUM for neurotypical 4th graders is being able to copy down information.
    i emailed his mom because he kept choosing to not complete anything and disrupt the class. his mom didn’t answer my email then told me at conferences that she “thought i was just venting”.
    so heartbreaking how little the parents care

    • @rhiannonh.7463
      @rhiannonh.7463 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      Oof! Sounds like he’s starved for attention tbh if the parents are refusing to be involved. I always remember that as a 90’s kid, kids who acted out either had neglectful parents or the kid had undiagnosed ADHD.
      Plus the wisest thing I read online from someone who did medical rotations at a psych ward with their professor.
      Someone pointed out and said, “Wow, they are attention seeking!”
      Professor: “Attention seeking or are they crying out to connect?”
      Often the most disruptive, attention seeking folks are starved for human connection.
      That’s why neglectful parents set up their kids to be disruptive because they are starved for connection at home and only get it at school when the teachers or their peers notice.

    • @charinaviljoen6415
      @charinaviljoen6415 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@rhiannonh.7463or to be very broken, my parents were emotionally neglectful. They did better than their parents but me and my sister grew up via the tv and very strong discipline. It has repricussions and i really worry that the next gen will feel and behave like me which isnt great because i. Am. Not. Okay. Currently im workings on being able to feel my emotions because as soon as i get upset i get unreasonably angry and thats destroying relationships since people dont want to be around people who have low emotional control.

    • @inkenhafner7187
      @inkenhafner7187 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Just copying stuff from the blackboard is lowest skill level, true. And being kept busy all day with tasks that are way, way below your skill level is extremely boring.
      Most children I know really enjoy figuring things out themselves.

    • @oatmealpacket
      @oatmealpacket หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@inkenhafner7187 this is true and unfortunately as i’ve learned over the years, for some skills (such as math) it is necessary to directly model how to solve the problem with the kids following along before letting them go into a more meaningful activity. this particular example i used was when i was teaching the algorithm for long division!

    • @oatmealpacket
      @oatmealpacket หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@inkenhafner7187 and the reality of education is that some children will find some topics extremely boring, long division being one of them, but it is more about accountability rather than interest in some cases.

  • @tifferssaidwhat
    @tifferssaidwhat 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2118

    As a millennial mom, I find that I am considered ‘strict’ by other moms because I expect respect from my kids. They will be corrected accordingly… they will be adults one day and I won’t have them acting foolish.

    • @Hollyucinogen
      @Hollyucinogen 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +95

      Eh, respect is earned, not automatically given. If you want respect, then you have to earn it. I say this as a 32-year-old.
      For example: my "Mom" is a diagnosed narcissist. I don't respect her at all, and I've been completely ignoring her since 2001. I'm never going to respect her or automatically listen to her, and I never have, even when I was 10.
      And I was born in 1989.

    • @Hollyucinogen
      @Hollyucinogen 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +45

      @@cronkhiteam That is true. They could actually be psychopaths, drug addicts, or child molesters, for example.
      Again, RESPECT IS EARNED. If you expect respect, then you earn it. You're not entitled to respect just because you spread your legs.
      The mindset of "Everyone is entitled to everything" is new.

    • @venusbeenus4675
      @venusbeenus4675 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +157

      @@Hollyucinogenthat’s all you took from it? You do know there are parents who just happen to discipline their kids who don’t treat them like shit right?

    • @Hollyucinogen
      @Hollyucinogen 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +63

      @@venusbeenus4675 Disciplining your child is not the same as being strict. If you're disciplining them, then you're trying to teach them a lesson which helps them grow as people. Being strict is not permitting your child to make their own choices based on what YOU want.

    • @parisbunny3783
      @parisbunny3783 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +59

      @@Hollyucinogen based asf. To many adults think that they want respect without realizing it’s a 2 way street

  • @xapitec
    @xapitec 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1591

    As a high school teacher, I want parents to remember how much they wanted kids to get back to the classroom, and how hard it was to teach their kids at home and how much they valued teachers during the panoramic...I want them to remember because they're pretending like we don't have a lot of work to do in the class. Also... Why do parents leave their kids to literal devices with no checks? Your kids don't read stories to you? Or read instructions on the ingredient box?
    Listen we are struggling out here!

    • @BlackGirlLovesAnime6
      @BlackGirlLovesAnime6 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +88

      Because regardless of what they say most of these parents do not want to be parents and that’s the real tea. They shame childless women yet the kids they have are neglected mentally and emotionally.

    • @AmandaVieiraMamaesouCult
      @AmandaVieiraMamaesouCult 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I left my teaching job during the pandemic. Zero regrets. The lack of appreciation was astounding. People actually thought we were doing nothing because we taught from home.

    • @nekocat12
      @nekocat12 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      @@BlackGirlLovesAnime6yep

    • @Jenntx
      @Jenntx 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Parents are struggling too, especially single parents.

    • @veronicastigger7947
      @veronicastigger7947 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      I’m a mom of an almost 3 year old that is thinking about homeschooling and only purchase educational materials for Christmas. He’s semi nonverbal but speaking more everyday. Yes he watching tv but he is not on the tablet and I do free play and try to input teaching him with such toys.

  • @PandaKD
    @PandaKD 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +402

    Elder Gen-Z fighting for their childhood back and Younger Gen-Z fighting to be older is so depressing

    • @scoobsydoo
      @scoobsydoo 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +31

      im stuck in the middle

    • @-DubuLightsMyWorld
      @-DubuLightsMyWorld 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      ​@@scoobsydooSame

    • @us-the-voices
      @us-the-voices 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +35

      us mid gen z are just scream in torture.
      but mostly fighting for our childhood, and learning sh*t we should have always know but don't.
      -pop

    • @gunjantripathi9271
      @gunjantripathi9271 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      every generation does that.. kids want to be adults, adults want to be kid again

    • @WritersMuse1
      @WritersMuse1 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I’ve turned 16 two months ago and I’m the most mature teenager in the world. I don’t vape, smoke or do drugs. I don’t like violence, due to the kids in my school I was quite introverted and antisocial but I am a kind person, I listen to people, I’m accepting of all communities, I love my mum and I’m not like any other stereotypical ex-secondary school kid.
      I like colour, I like to be youthful, I like drawing high fantasy art and wearing colourful stuff, but due to my household most colours are muted to grey and it’s sad for me as an autistic person who sees things in colour.
      It’s so sad what this world has become.

  • @mlkmhlwt
    @mlkmhlwt 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +266

    I believe its also because theres this trend going on to “break the genrational trauma” and the “trauma” in question is simply disciplining your child.

    • @Lavi_the_ghost
      @Lavi_the_ghost 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +63

      A lot of gen x/boomer parents did abuse their kids so I'm glad that cycle is getting broken. The issue is millennials as a whole have a very "this or that" or "black or white" view of everything. Nothing in moderation, no combination, nothing. It has to be all or nothing. So they instead of keeping the good parts of how they were raised and undoing the bad, they just did the exact opposite of how they were raised and hoped for the best

    • @ieatkidsuwu
      @ieatkidsuwu 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      fr tho

    • @rachael5611
      @rachael5611 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      God loves you! Repent and believe that Jesus paid the price for our sins! He can give you so much love, joy and peace!

    • @lco09
      @lco09 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      💯

    • @joyc.e.7511
      @joyc.e.7511 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      No, the trauma they're referring to is very real. Let's not pretend like hitting your kids and treating them as things that should be seen and not heard was OK in any regard. That messed a lot of people up and it's ok to accept that and be better for future children. Like anything though, there's been over correction in the form of no discipline, which is also a huge problem because you need to discipline your child to parent well. It's necessary to them as human beings.

  • @labeauteleia
    @labeauteleia 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2008

    Honestly, as a 16 year old right now, I’m even saddened at how quickly my peers and those younger than me are growing up. I’ve been seeing this most with my youngest cousin. She is 11. Just started middle school. All she does is worry about boys, to the point where she’s failing tests. She’s disrespectful to her mom and she cares too much about being grown. I remember on halloween, I invited my friend over, we dressed up and went trick or treating with my even younger cousins (about 8-9) and when we asked why she wasn’t going with us she said… “i’m too old to go trick or treating” SHE SAID THAT TO 16 YEAR OLDS THAT ARE GOING TRICK OR TREATING 😭 I love my auntie and everything but I wish she would crack down on the things my cousin does, instead of rewarding it with makeup n stuff. Once again, I’m 16 and I barely just started wearing concealer, foundation, eyeliner meanwhile she has all of that at 11. It’s so sad, I just want her to enjoy being a kid, I even try to turn on movies from my childhood when she’s around and she gets bored of it and goes on her phone :( Even though me and my parents have some disagreements i’m happy I was raised the way I was, because I still got to be a kid, and i’m happy about that. It really is just crazy like when I was in middle school I was still playing Animal Jam and begging my mom for the newest monster high doll. However I think because this is becoming such a widespread issue, the next generation or later Gen alpha will be better. Sorry for the long comment! This whole topic in general has had me thinking and I wanted to chime in!

    • @ChillingTales12
      @ChillingTales12 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +53

      You should be even more concerned about the amount of people identifying as transgender

    • @prairym3d
      @prairym3d 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +176

      ​@@ChillingTales12 Ok so? Let ppl be whoever they wanna be.

    • @chickfila_is-better
      @chickfila_is-better 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +117

      this is sooo true because tell me why my 8 year old younger cousin is getting make up, expensive jordans, and asking for an iPhone 15. This is just crazy to me!

    • @haahmayan9637
      @haahmayan9637 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +47

      You’re doing the right thing with your cousin it’s definitely her parents fault I’m in shock 😮

    • @SlimShadyyyyyyyy
      @SlimShadyyyyyyyy 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Damn this low-key sounds like me except I’m in the 6th grade, is it really that bad?

  • @TwoMangoSmoothies
    @TwoMangoSmoothies 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +981

    I'm a high school teacher. It's not only the parents, it's educational policy! We're penalized for students failing because it affects data which impacts funding. They basically persecute us if we do not give the students passing marks despite them not performing to state standards. Additionally, No Child Left Behind is a travesty. Social promotion is the norm until high school, in NYC at least. The kids don't take education seriously until they're placed in an environment where they cannot graduate unless they pass a standardized test.

    • @lizaaltizer7775
      @lizaaltizer7775 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      It also makes you wonder how they are passing those standardized tests when their reading level is coming in at middle school level… Either the tests are lying when these kids graduate or the schools are lying. There is no way they have data that proves these kids can barely read and they magically pad standardized tests at a graduate level.

    • @datanamiyo
      @datanamiyo 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      THIS!

    • @leebliss3622
      @leebliss3622 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      Hi, as a psych student (so purely unqualified but with a vested interest) I think were seeing a boom in neurodivergent kids who just don't learn in the traditional ways, and don't flourish in a traditionally academic environment or curriculum/s, because of modern medicine and people having kids at older ages, kids born in the last few generations and now are being born to much older parents and this means the egg and sperm quality is compromised. increasing the chances of those kids having adhd/autism or at least traits that mirror those conditions, this means we are ending up with millions of kids who simply do not do well in these traditional environments and means we need an entire overhaul within our educational systems and support systems

    • @galaxygirl2548
      @galaxygirl2548 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +32

      ⁠@@leebliss3622are there any studies to support that??

    • @bafoonerysamurai6911
      @bafoonerysamurai6911 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      Yup 100% I was looking for a comment like this. It’s so bad. I graduated high school 2 years ago in 2021 and when I did I honestly felt like I didn’t accomplish anything which I still strongly believe. Grading was far too lenient to the point that it essentially incentivized everyone to not try and as a result I stopped trying myself because I thought it doesn’t matter anyways if I’m still going to pass and graduate, and from what I’m hearing from my mom who’s also a teacher, it’s getting a lot worse each year. Parents and the school system is setting these kids up for failure.

  • @Lov3lyMoon
    @Lov3lyMoon 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +809

    The “no child left behind” thing (aka moving them forward even though they are failing) was implemented for students who have learning disabilities or just simply aren’t exceptional at certain subjects (for example I was good at basically everything except math) but it’s being abused now;because now, kids and parents know that they can fail everything and still get out of their grade level.

    • @eliana993
      @eliana993 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +41

      Actually what’s crazier is that before that kids reading skills were even worse. As the set of education laws passed during the bush era included science based phonetic reading skills for all kids since they were not reading phonetically before then. A lot of kids didn’t not learn how to read properly and were continuing to read poorly. It was worse and it’s barely gotten better. Education for the masses in the USA has always been terrible.

    • @tovarishchfeixiao
      @tovarishchfeixiao 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      @@eliana993 lol english and phonetic reading in one sentence? Are you sure that you are talking about the same language?
      Because written english is everything but not phonetic.

    • @tovarishchfeixiao
      @tovarishchfeixiao 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @OneWorldGovernment2030-yv3zc Even if dictionaries trying to do that, the language itself still won't be a phonetic language.
      In fact, english is well known for being a big mess and not being phonetic at any point of the language.

    • @Misora7303
      @Misora7303 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      To me, grading in general is a very flawed way to value the knowledge of anyone, that way you learn to pass a test, not to understand what you are being taught

    • @Misora7303
      @Misora7303 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      ​@@tovarishchfeixiaohey, spanish speaker here, English is phonetic sometimes but it has so many exceptions that it is very close to not being it at all, the word phonetic is a good example, because we have the letter "f" but the word uses "ph" instead to make the sound, it is very confusing to non speakers

  • @lace-and-eights
    @lace-and-eights 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +54

    i used to work as a hostess at a restaurant, and whenever I sat a family with a kid who was reading a book I would always engage and try to encourage the behaviour by asking what they were reading and why they liked it. these kids always looked at me with wide eyes when I would react positively, and it made me SO SAD, I couldn’t do much but I want to think that I helped encourage them to read more.

    • @inkenhafner7187
      @inkenhafner7187 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Or they looked at you wide eyed because a total stranger interrupted them and went on and on and on about them obviously just being busy with reading.

    • @jelociraptor318
      @jelociraptor318 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ^ pretty sure OP meant wide-eyed as in "Wow I wish my parents would engage with me about reading as much as this stranger "

  • @amberdoty83
    @amberdoty83 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1217

    The dance teacher broke my heart, I’ve owned a dance studio since I was 18, I’m now almost 41. And I’ve seen exactly what she’s saying unfold in my own studio and it really is sad. My employees and I have an awful time getting the parents to help us help their dancer by not running around the studio while class is in session, etc and have been told many times: she’s just wild or she’s been cooped up in school all day. So often, we are left feeling like the bad guy by not allowing the 5 year old to do whatever she’d like. It’s disheartening.

    • @yageshabazz3456
      @yageshabazz3456 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +86

      Kick them out of the program then; the kids and their parents need to know that refusing to follow instructions results in consequences

    • @Jamalquentinjr
      @Jamalquentinjr 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +30

      ​@@yageshabazz3456the whole studio will be empty 😂. Welcome to reality. These kids are our future. Hopefully they'll atleast break the outer shields keeping us in this slave illusion of reality where we think we are so special and alone in the universe hiding the true intergalactic alien races that know we exist while we don't know they do.

    • @Fruitcupper
      @Fruitcupper 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +29

      Deeply concerning 😢
      I run my own business and I learnt a hard lesson last year.
      "Work for a bad client once, and a great client forever."

    • @amberdoty83
      @amberdoty83 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@Fruitcupper wise words for sure, very true.
      Mine is tough on my heart because it’s kids. I admit I allow late payments and all sorts of things I shouldn’t because I hate for the kid to not be in dance. 🫤

    • @amberdoty83
      @amberdoty83 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@yageshabazz3456 I wish I was able to but usually it’ll work out or they’ll quit. Lol
      And I have wonderful dancers and dance parents that usually offset some of the madness. But you are right, I should be more strict

  • @Marella2024
    @Marella2024 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1085

    The kid singing his ABC's was so wholesome. He will be successful in life and have good character. 🙏🏼

    • @tysonk-t2130
      @tysonk-t2130 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +107

      If his peers around him don’t corrupt that wholesomeness. But it’s clear to see his parents are doing a good job at home.

    • @keeknee
      @keeknee 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +78

      So was the other one singing peaches from Mario

    • @AprilAngel4124
      @AprilAngel4124 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +53

      The one singing ABC’s and the one singing peaches from the Mario movie we need more kids in this generation to be like that

  • @moneyr.3485
    @moneyr.3485 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +684

    There’s a massive difference between gentle parenting and permissive parenting. Parents need to learn that before adopting the method 🤷🏾‍♀️

    • @julissavalencia1751
      @julissavalencia1751 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

      Yeah, I’m so tired of permissive parents saying they are practicing gentle parenting. It’s not gentle parenting at all.

    • @ChristinaMoralesMindfuqed
      @ChristinaMoralesMindfuqed 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@AkibulanHorusRA😂yes they did

    • @fllowerknight
      @fllowerknight 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      neglectful parenting.

  • @papillon2135
    @papillon2135 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +52

    I graduated hs in 2018 and you weren’t even allowed to use your phone at all during class, unless you wanted it taken away. meawhile my sister born in 2009 sends me tiktoks while she’s in class lol

    • @joyc.e.7511
      @joyc.e.7511 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I also graduated in 2018 and as long as you finished your work in my school, it was fine to be on your phone

    • @joshuafrazier3904
      @joshuafrazier3904 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@joyc.e.7511same for me. In my HS being on your phone was fine as long as it wasn't while a teacher was talking and giving instruction and you actually completed your work.

  • @RYANNRATCLIFF
    @RYANNRATCLIFF 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1227

    Can we just appreciate the kids who sang normals songs like the ABCs and Peaches 😭

    • @_matcha4
      @_matcha4 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +121

      it’s so sad that we have to appreciate these two children though…. Reality is fricked up

    • @Vivian-ho1xu
      @Vivian-ho1xu 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +129

      The kid singing peaches was so cute 😭

    • @PrincessMavenKittyDarkholme
      @PrincessMavenKittyDarkholme 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      Am I the only one who hates Anti-Gen Alpha videos

    • @range685
      @range685 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@PrincessMavenKittyDarkholme People aren't being "Anti-Gen Alpha." If kids were just a bit behind, it would be bad to blast them like this, but when it's this bad, people need to call it out.

    • @Svetlanathegreat
      @Svetlanathegreat 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

      @@PrincessMavenKittyDarkholmeYeah.

  • @infiniteideassquared9102
    @infiniteideassquared9102 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +966

    I'm Gen Z (2003) and in college, writing a paper on why public school K-12 teachers are quitting en masse. I initially was going to focus on money issues, teachers raising kids instead of parents, and overall being treated with a lack of respect. This video helped broaden my perspective on many more levels of this issue, and how heartbreaking the situation is. People are really hanging on for dear life! And these kids don't even understand how much they're struggling because they don't have a reasonable benchmark to refer to, or creative aspirations because it's being programmed out of them.

    • @ladydj4life
      @ladydj4life 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +23

      You wrote my mind. The lack of benchmark is so disheartening smh

    • @TheDivineEmpath
      @TheDivineEmpath 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +28

      Gen Z - 2002.
      I work in education and am simply shocked how many millennials send their students to school & expect the school system to raise their children

    • @mr.shardz7936
      @mr.shardz7936 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      also how poorly kids r raised. not even gen alpha, what i (as 20 yo, also 2003 gen z) saw irl from birth years 2008 are where it starts down hill. at local alternative bar i hang out every year we get younger gens that come when they r at start of high school, i talked to people in range from 2000-2010 there, i have friends born from 1993 to 2007, and what i noticed, 04,05,06,07 ones that came after me r chill and very well behaved since day one of coming. then 08 came...and 09 and 2010 kids,(we never had 14-13yos here before) 08--09-10, from first day they came, they were extremly arogant, extremly rude,trash the place, break things and make fun of us older folks there. us who r in our 20s and late teens started calling them cokoliino (baby-toddler food brand name) mafia, cause thats how bad they are. also i wont even begin on gen alpha, i was walkin on street listening to my music minding my own bussines then some 10yos start cussing me out and calling me names and making fun of how i look (this happends several times a week). literally WHERE ARE THE DAMN PARENT WHO IS RAISING THEM. i was chronically online kid since late 2000s but i still have respect for others andi have manners and my parents did gentle parenting. these youngest gen z and gen alpha are somethin else

    • @marniekilbourne608
      @marniekilbourne608 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      I graduated with an education degree in 2004. I taught for less than 10 years and I changed careers. I quit for all of the reasons you listed and more and I thankfully hadn't even seen the worst of it. Things were progressively getting worse and I didn't see any hope that they would get any better. There was no support from parents or school administration. Plus, suddenly you actually had to consider that you may be shot and killed doing your job! No amount of money would get me back into a classroom. Not that they will ever pay teachers what they pay other jobs that also require at least a Bachelor's degree.

    • @rol2377
      @rol2377 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      i got fired for not getting the covid shot (i was 9 months pregnant and did not feel comfortable with no testing on pregnant women), as did many other teachers. don’t forget to add that in your paper

  • @Hawtestyf
    @Hawtestyf 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1062

    My little sister is currently in 7th grade and she's having a tough time with reading comprehension. My mom has been having her read the diary of Anne Frank, and it's surprising to see her struggle with it. The thing is, our other siblings and I read it back in grade 4 without any issues. It's even more surprising considering that she's an honors student. It makes me wonder if the school is starting to lower their academic standards.

    • @us-the-voices
      @us-the-voices 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +140

      1000% especially the US school system, school needs a reform extremely badly it's just trash.
      the reason half of these things are problems is because
      A) the teachers are overworked and underpaid.
      B) they are unfit to teach children and bully them
      C) the curriculum is trash and doesn't allow teachers to engage with their students and learn
      D) the students parents are trash, and they aren't getting any support for it and thus they are suffering education wise
      E) the cost of living crisis combined with the current mental health epidemic is actually really impacting and stressing the f*ck out of students to the point they wanna die.
      F) the government just doesn't listen to anyone and that's why we are in this whole issue
      it's not gen Alpha's fault, they are literally children.
      -pop

    • @ruebee313
      @ruebee313 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I've noticed that the AP and honor students are actually just the kids that don't have extreme behavioral issues. So they remove them to an alternate class just so they can concentrate

    • @unitysanchez9114
      @unitysanchez9114 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +52

      The school has been dumbing us down since JFK. Especially in physical fitness and mathematics.

    • @DreasTapes
      @DreasTapes 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The school is definitely lowering the standards. They're letting anyone pass because it will look bad on their data if they didn't.

    • @tickledfrenchies7633
      @tickledfrenchies7633 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +27

      There are resources that can help you help her improve. You local library may have programs that can help. ❤

  • @cheesefries6453
    @cheesefries6453 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +67

    it makes me feel better for my future kids seeing the amount of people in the comments that plan on reducing their children’s screen time (by a lot) and even deciding to home school. i was starting to get scared my kids were bound to become socially awkward because i refuse to let my kids have majority of their friends be like the children in this video🤦🏾‍♀️

  • @mcgaggie1442
    @mcgaggie1442 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +841

    As a babysitter and camp councilor: I’ve taught kids to play pretend. We need to be more imaginative and normalize being horses or dragons or dinosaurs with each other for entertainment.

    • @kathymc234
      @kathymc234 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      ​@@PrincessMavenKittyDarkholmedon't be contrary just to be contrary. It's hateful and argumentative. And sticking "autistic" or your name doesn't give you free range to be a jerk. I'm disabled and judged if I'm rude. So be NICE!

    • @PrincessMavenKittyDarkholme
      @PrincessMavenKittyDarkholme 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@kathymc234 no

    • @PrincessMavenKittyDarkholme
      @PrincessMavenKittyDarkholme 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@kathymc234 im not a jerks

    • @PrincessMavenKittyDarkholme
      @PrincessMavenKittyDarkholme 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@kathymc234 I just disagree

    • @kj5250
      @kj5250 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      You get bullied for doing that now

  • @lucky156477
    @lucky156477 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +732

    As a Gen Z parent to a ~2 year old, this whole situation breaks my freaking heart. We did no screen time until my daughter recently got very sick and miserable so we caved and turned the TV on to watch some train videos and sesame street, literally only a month before her 2nd birthday. I always get told how big of a vocabulary she has and how well she can speak and understand the world around her, and I can’t help wonder if it’s because of the lack of screen time. Don’t get me wrong, it is hard to be a mom, I couldn’t imagine doing it with less help than I have. I’m a uni student who just finished my honours thesis, and I work part time, so I get how it would be nice and great to just put the kid in front of a screen and have them busy... I’m exhausted mentally by all the playing when I know I have other shit to do. But I cried from pride/happiness watching my daughter playing pretend with her new Little People toys, because her imagination is just so big and the toy kept her busy for hours. It was so incredible. I’ve never regretted the decision to prioritize physical play and activities and minimize screen time as much as we could. I come from a place of great privilege but it really does seem harmful how much screen time YOUNG babies have these days. Heck, I know I myself as a 24 year old have way too much screen time too.

    • @Lisa-ih7fk
      @Lisa-ih7fk 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +59

      Similar situation with my son, we almost made it to 2 without screens but I live a 4 hour drive from my family and caved on a trip home because he was getting very distressed in the car in general and I was worried how the drive would go, so I downloaded TH-cam kids on my old phone and put parental controls on so only a few things like ms Rachel and some nursery rhyme channels were available for him.
      His speech and understanding is amazing, I've been told my many that he'd communication is better than a 3 year olds, he uses 4 and 5 word sentences etc. He also loves to play pretend kitchen, he cooks all sorts and will even go and pretend to feed his baby doll and teddies. I can't say for sure what he'd be like if we stuck him in front of hey bear and ms Rachel when he was a newborn onwards but I'm glad we stuck it out as long as we have. I also think screens can have a place and once they aren't abused then it's ok. For example, if they are sick and you need them to stay in a bed (my son was recently put on oxygen in hospital but was constantly trying to pull it out, so I let him watch the phone) however, using a phone every time someone goes into a restaurant is so lazy and really doesn't do anyone any good long-term.

    • @lucky156477
      @lucky156477 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +38

      @@Lisa-ih7fk It is basically the exact same for us. Good for you guys, I’m happy to hear other parents also limiting screen time for babies. Of course screens have their use in certain aspects of life, and they can really be a sanity saver with a sick kiddo or in a real pinch that’s for sure. But I think in general it’s best to limit toddler’s and children in general’s time on screens and also to monitor their content carefully! Now that we’ve introduced the TV to our 2 year old, I’m super picky on what she gets to watch because some stuff like hey bear and cocomelon are just WAY too overstimulating. She loves real-life train videos, sesame street, bear in the big blue house, etc.

    • @milkglassfairy7641
      @milkglassfairy7641 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

      Idk. My first had a lot of tv and has an incredible vocabulary, always has. We read to him a lot and never used baby talk etc… I think that plays a huge part. My kids get tv… sometimes yt on MY iPad (they don’t have their own iPads lol) and sometimes (maybe once a week) they get an hour or so of their Nintendo’s… my four year old was delayed with speech. But I raised both my 9yo and 4yo the same… lots of reading to them, lots of talking to them etc. kids just develop differently. Your child will be fine after watching a bit of tv. I took my kids out of school to homeschool and my oldest is thriving… the tech in schools was concerning for me. My kids also just spend hours PLAYING! You’re doing everything right :) prioritising play, letting little one have some chill screen time when ill and needing a rest… it’s fine :) you’re doing great.

    • @lucky156477
      @lucky156477 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      @@milkglassfairy7641 I appreciate the reassurance a lot. I think the programs on TV matter a lot too - even just in the little while since my daughters watched bear in the big blue house she’s learned a lot and she loves it, but I still feel guilty every time lol. Your comment is very reassuring to me. Growing up I know I watched plenty of TV as young as when I was a baby and grew up to be fine, but seeing some of the kids these days just scares me, it’s so much more than “just TV” like it was when I was little. I think the major contributor/difference/factor though is reading!!! So many parents don’t read to their kids these days and imo, that’s probably why their kids don’t and can’t read. And also why some kids spend so much time in front of screens, because they don’t know how to read and don’t find enjoyment in it.

    • @neveionce_7174
      @neveionce_7174 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      It can play both parts knowing the outside world and watching tv bit if u do let her watch some safe shows for 30 mins

  • @cocoaicci_
    @cocoaicci_ 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +433

    As a Gen Z who was born in 2005, seeing these kids singing pound town and other sexy red songs at such a young age made my jaw drop!? I remember when i was around their age the only raunchy song i knew (and didn't even know it was a sexual song until i was much older) was Barbie Girl by Aqua and i loved singing it all the time because i loved playing with my Barbie, monster high and bratz dolls😭

    • @MangoLime1
      @MangoLime1 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +51

      Wait, Barbie Girl was sexual?!?! 🫨
      I didn't connect all of the dots until you just said that and I'm in my 30s now lolbs
      We had raunchy songs growing up but it was all innuendo and implications, concepts that children don't grasp
      Damn, I feel so bad for this generation of kids

    • @JustMeandGod_
      @JustMeandGod_ 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      U young I’m 99 baby didn’t have a phone til high school first iPhone when it first came out

    • @B_addie
      @B_addie 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@JustMeandGod_2000 baby here and I didn’t have a device until I was in high school, but before then I felt the pressure from seeing other kids around me getting phones (not yet I phones) in elementary school, this was right before it became a requirement in classes and now most k-12 schools require internet access to some extent

    • @BirchTales
      @BirchTales 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      I’m a 2005 kid too! (18 atm). I remember being a kid, climbing trees and playing with legos. I love the freedom and exploration that comes with adulthood, but that all came later. It’s like these younger kids are missing out on childhood

    • @Ruinwyn
      @Ruinwyn 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      ​@MangoLime1 innuendo and implication is how raunchy songs used to work. And it works great. Once a kid understands what is being sung, they are old enough for it. And I feel innuendo is often hotter because you can insert more of your own tastes into it.

  • @sriracha_14
    @sriracha_14 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

    2001 gen z here. I remember around 2014 we were taking my little brother to enroll for preschool. This teacher taught my dad when he was little and then taught my siblings, so we were close with this lady. She told us it would be her last year teaching because she noticed a negative shift in kid's behavior over the years and she was getting too old to correct so much bad behavior. She said moms these days only focus on their phones, so kids feel like they have to act out in order to get her attention. Of course, mom would give simple distractions when all children want is her attention. Because the kid only knows to act out, they do this in public too and they don't understand how to properly get an adult's attention. I was a teen at the time and just thought 'old people complaining about phones' but now I realize she was literally reading the future. Humans are meant to be raised by humans, not machines, and the behavior and numbers we see now do not lie.

  • @85hr
    @85hr 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1060

    As a young Gen Z ( im a 2009 baby), I see this first hand at my school with the kids in the grades below me. It's INSANE what these kids are like, even some of the younger ones in my grade. I feel sort of like an outcast when ever I have to interact with them. Theres such an abrupt cutoff between the Gen Z and Gen Alpha and theres definitely a generational gap, there really is a big difference from our grades to the ones below us. It's scary what's to come.
    Thank you so much for the likes its good too see that therea re some like minded people out there like..

    • @justanotherpotato5523
      @justanotherpotato5523 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +88

      I’m gen z as well and I agree. I’ve been working customer service based jobs and I’ve noticed gen alpha acting up and not being disciplined by their parents 🥲

    • @85hr
      @85hr 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +60

      @@justanotherpotato5523 ikr and the parenst think its so funny too.. like its not funny thgat your kid is disrupting a public place or worse.

    • @Denayja29
      @Denayja29 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +57

      Also a 2009 baby and it’s like your considered weird if your not caught up on trends or not dressing grow or smoking just acting grow in general

    • @85hr
      @85hr 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +42

      @@Denayja29 seriosuly everyone vapes and its so bad its normalized

    • @sageo7618
      @sageo7618 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@justanotherpotato5523 I scold those little f-ers when I see them acting bratty in stores lol. They stop real quick. I'm a millennial with no kids and would have no patience for that BS.

  • @kittybee9000
    @kittybee9000 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +371

    They call it gentle parenting, but it isn't gentle parenting at all; it's permissive parenting and it's the other side of the toxic parenting spectrum and its so sad to see

    • @Mora_tube44
      @Mora_tube44 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Bro my aunt is too gentle to her children that my cousins are literally treat her so bad and shout at her,my cousin is 8 and she is singing the b word IM 13 and I listen to songs withour cussing words💀💀

    • @God_abandoned_us_all
      @God_abandoned_us_all 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      It's not gentle parenting, that's called neglectful parenting

    • @kellyroyal9579
      @kellyroyal9579 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ⁠@@Mora_tube44I agree my aunt takes care of her sister daughter who’s been transitioning since 12 now 13 and they treat her like garbage and steal money steal her bank cards call her names and say she’s a idiot loser doesn’t go to school gets mad over anything then breaks the stuf she buys him it’s crazy and he thinks he’s cool and lives like a millionaire but only complains and cry

    • @Boho_Gypsy
      @Boho_Gypsy 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@Mora_tube44wow, your aunt needs to parent better. You sound like you have a good head on your shoulders.

  • @TC.._
    @TC.._ 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1134

    I've noticed a difference as well. I was born 1983 and we had cognitive approaches that are non existent now. Even writing in cursive and doing long division expanded your brain in ways that don't exist anymore. So logic and common sense is a rarity now. Everything is a trend now. We gotta make books look cool, paying attention in school, outperforming your classmates look like something to strive for again.

    • @natesamadhi33
      @natesamadhi33 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +79

      No Child Left Behind was the beginning of the end for education.

    • @WilliamScavengerFish
      @WilliamScavengerFish 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      How do people sign things if they don't know cursive writing?

    • @natesamadhi33
      @natesamadhi33 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +57

      @@WilliamScavengerFish they just print their names like regular. I've seen it.

    • @fehyndana7725
      @fehyndana7725 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +29

      Kids don’t learn cursive anymore??

    • @marykatteach
      @marykatteach 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +47

      We do teach long division! I’m trying my best as a math teacher to build in that analytical thinking

  • @elliemarie847
    @elliemarie847 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +76

    I'm currently 34 weeks pregnant with my daughter and these videos/situations are exactly why I want to homeschool. People don't parent anymore and I don't want her around all of these bad influences or have her education suffer because her classmates can't keep up

    • @prosandcons-fl2cc
      @prosandcons-fl2cc 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

      Please be careful and diligent! I did online/home school for 4 years, its very easy to get isolated socially.

    • @DanteLikesRock
      @DanteLikesRock 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      why is a lady like you subscribed to Rich Piana lmao

    • @ReginaTrans_
      @ReginaTrans_ 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Your kid is Gen Beta, they might be so different who knows

    • @Greatmount
      @Greatmount 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I am supplementing with home education but my child will go to school.

    • @elliemarie847
      @elliemarie847 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@DanteLikesRock what is that supposed to mean?

  • @sebastian.ball_s
    @sebastian.ball_s 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +583

    “calling home” used to be a very scary thing to kids and it still is to high schooler and such but now with the phone call schools are going to need a new punishment/warning

    • @lauuu__ri431
      @lauuu__ri431 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      I remember once my anatomy teacher made my grandma come speak to him when picking me up (she does not speak English) because I got a B in one quarter instead of an A and since the teacher did not speak Spanish, my grandma thought I was in trouble so that's what she told my parents and I was grounded. I tried to explain but apparently I was "telling a story". F that guy, for real.

    • @alkahinat4558
      @alkahinat4558 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      ‘Calling home’ always got me together very swiftly.

    • @mamadoom9724
      @mamadoom9724 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      I got a call that my teen daughter was caught vaping at school. I told her principal “thanks for letting me know and I won’t let this slide. We’re going to have a long talk and she’s going to be grounded for a long time” the principal actually seemed shocked that there were going to be consequences and he seemed like he actually felt bad. He kind of stuttered and said “welll it’s not the worst thing she could do. It’s very common” I think he wasn’t used to parents actually caring.

    • @redcadet
      @redcadet 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      for me (graduated high school ‘22) it was emailing our parents lol. once they pulled out the “we will email your parents about this” it was so over. especially for me because both my parents ALWAYS read emails from the school

    • @TrevorHamberger
      @TrevorHamberger 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Jail

  • @shealynnmichelle
    @shealynnmichelle 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +324

    gentle parenting gets such a bad rep because there are so many people misusing the term when they are actually permissive parenting 🥲 i am a gentle parent. i treat my 2.5 year old daughter with respect, & compassion (because again, she is only 2! she’s still a baby in this big world) and she also has boundaries that we’re working with her on. we don’t let her run our household by any means, & we also don’t give her arbitrary punishments just because we feel like it.

    • @charissa6648
      @charissa6648 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      That's not gentle parenting that's good parenting.
      Or I am wrong with my perception of it. Gentle parenting to me means no consequences for the children and allowing them to react however they feel at the time.
      Disciplining children is for the child, but some parents do it for themselves because they are too busy or lazy to actually teach their kids a lesson. Or they punish out of anger rather then teaching. Discipline should always come with an explanation and actions have consequences.
      Thats what discipline is meant for; to protect and teach the child.

    • @shealynnmichelle
      @shealynnmichelle 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +44

      ⁠​⁠​⁠​⁠@@charissa6648 Authoritative parenting, respectful parenting, or gentle parenting all fall under the same umbrella per se. It’s all about letting our children still be children, feel their emotions & working with them to learn how to regulate themselves. Allowing children to act without consequences or not having any boundaries would be permissive parenting 😊

    • @danika9411
      @danika9411 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      ​​@@shealynnmichelle I think one problem is also how gentle parenting is taught. I was in an online group with around 10k people, mostly parents. And it was disturbing. F.e. it is taught in these groups that praising a child is emotional abuse and by saying well done, we are abusing them. Because well done means that the child doesn't always do something well. So any parise is forbidden... ( I know there are better ways to praise than saying simply well done, just as a quick example ) That is not a joke. That group also was a bit like a cult. We were not allowed to talk about outside sources, books and articles and we were forbidden to post any links.
      The most scary thing about this group was, that people mindlessly agreed. The admins and mods were often scolding members using therapy speech and people were very eager to please them and fawn to pacify them. It was quiet the experience. I left that group. This one had 10K members! If more groups are like that, it's no wonder.
      One thing I noticed in your comment, about the difference between boundaries and rules, because I see that mixed up a lot. A boundary is something we do for ourselfs. F.e. I don't accept it if people call me names. That's a boundary. A rule is something we use to control others behaviour. I don't want you to call me names, because it hurts me. That is actually a rule not a boundary. But people confuse this often by saying "respect my boundary" when technically they want you to accept their rules.
      Both are important. Boundaries give us self confidence and also help with developing a better sense of self by thinking about what is and is not acceptable for us. And knowing we are going to protect ourselfs if our boundaries are broken.
      If you know this already, I'm sorry! Maybe I misread it then. I just see people not understanding the difference between boundaries and rules a lot.

    • @geostorm06
      @geostorm06 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@shealynnmichelleAuthoritative? As someone who's read Animal Farm that sounds pretty bad, can you explain what that is?

    • @alexisgonzales4689
      @alexisgonzales4689 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      ​@@geostorm06 the best way I can explain it is like putting ur foot down u make it clear that ur child did wrong and wrongdoings have consequences

  • @damilolaemiola4240
    @damilolaemiola4240 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +320

    Kids are up against soooooo much these days, brain rot from lockdown, increase in adult content in media, early unfiltered access to technology and SM, lack of healthy role models, unintentional parenting, et al. Its incredibly scary how different their generation is shaping up to be and I foresee many of them struggling and negatively influencing one another.

    • @us-the-voices
      @us-the-voices 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      I'm just going to say it, they won't be bad people. they won't be anything, they are still literally children.
      but speaking as one of the eldest iPad kids-
      (18-20 YEs that's how old we are now, people don't realise the people they are talking about actually exist as members of society)
      we ended up fine.
      a bit traumatised, but in the end? fine.
      what people kinda forget I think, is that we didn't have this interconnectedness we have now.
      if you wanted to talk with someone halfway around the world in the 80s or 70s you had to mail them messages, or use a typewriter or telegram or fax.
      now you can send videos instantly!!!
      things are just different, but I think half of it is actual fear mongering. and the other half is "oh we are seeing new presentations of child neglect"
      because?
      all this stuff? NOT NEW! we have studies and research and just everything to back up child neglect f*cks up kids.
      and so much of the stuff being said is just child neglect, the cost of living crisis/the housing crisis, the mental health epidemic, and the school system finally becoming unsustainable.
      it's just the Great Depression 2.0 I'm telling ya!
      but it's just.. half fear mongering, and a rise of child abuse/neglect tbh.
      -pop

    • @ajakakakak
      @ajakakakak 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      They’re gonna be fine. Ppl have gone though worse

    • @stitches318
      @stitches318 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Not to mention they live off practically nothing but kinder eggs and hot cheetos

    • @GirlieCarolinas
      @GirlieCarolinas 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      What is “unintentional parenting”?

    • @GirlieCarolinas
      @GirlieCarolinas 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@us-the-voicesmic drop. First intelligent comment I’ve seen.

  • @joshuafrazier3904
    @joshuafrazier3904 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Remember when you where a child got a bunch of toys and could just sit down and play with them for hours. Like you'd get your power rangers or lego dragon toy or whatever and you'd just imagine a whole story with them. I remember my brother and I doing that when I was young and enjoying it immensely.

    • @jonelrobinson7432
      @jonelrobinson7432 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yep! I played with toys and I also loved playing legos when I was a kid.

  • @Anonymous_Ki
    @Anonymous_Ki 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +622

    I think some people don’t realize that being literate is such a fundamental part of just society in general. Being able to critically evaluate situations and just being able to read between lines is extremely important. I hope that we’re wrong about this next generation though bc I’d hate to live in that world. Ps. I also hv a little cousin born in 2012 and I abhor the thought of calling him a genz person lol.

    • @madlie2452
      @madlie2452 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +33

      There’s many people who are of age who don’t have those skills and it baffles me every time I encounter them.

    • @Falling-ender
      @Falling-ender 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      Literacy is necessary for every career path in some way shape or form. It’s how society functions. It’s terrifying to think gen alpha just doesn’t have thst

    • @darkstarr984
      @darkstarr984 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I am so fortunate I learned reading and writing easily and that my mom taught me how to think critically, because “reading between the lines” for me is extremely unnatural and took a lot of work to do.

    • @andpeg
      @andpeg 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      No it’s not. A little more than half our population cannot read above a 6th grade reading level. Gen alpha definitely don’t make up half our population. It’s been an issue, it’s just being exposed to the public.

  • @sunnysun120
    @sunnysun120 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +391

    As late Gen Z (12, almost 13) I am disgusted by my own generation. I am putting boundaries on my own screentime and apps because of how fried my brain is from social media and manipulated by influencers. This video makes me want to major in being a teacher just so I can change the future generation.

    • @jellirabauke2565
      @jellirabauke2565 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +48

      It's even sad that you have to think about something like that

    • @amiraa_...
      @amiraa_... 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

      I wish you the best.

    • @breeziebanks
      @breeziebanks 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      Good for you! 🤍

    • @maranne_
      @maranne_ 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +27

      I'm glad that you are aware that too much screen time can damage our brain and you are taking action on this. Please stay true to yourself, don't fall on acting mature, enjoy your teenage years. I truly wish you the best❤❤❤

    • @jessp8238
      @jessp8238 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

      To be honest, social media is really not for minors.

  • @lilgrogu1187
    @lilgrogu1187 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +674

    I think gentle parenting has turned into people with unsolved trauma, *reflecting* their trauma off their kids. Because they had such strict parents they try so hard to be the antithesis of it, but they overshoot and completely fail to teach their kids respect. I think they don’t understand that the saying “your kids are not extensions of yourself” also applies to their unhealed inner child. They need to solve that before having kids imo

    • @jenesishunter9674
      @jenesishunter9674 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

      Damn. That's so True 😖

    • @livenitup862
      @livenitup862 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +104

      Gentle parenting is not the same as permissive parenting. Gentle parenting: kid breaks pot by accident-> you don’t yell at your kid, but tell them to clean it up. It’s a good learning experience and kids face consequences. Gentle parenting is about consequences instead of punishment, it’s about learning to differentiate between a wish& a need, it‘s about boundaries-but gentle and in a way that is understandable for the child

    • @Dyslexic.D0ry
      @Dyslexic.D0ry 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +63

      That’s not gentle parenting lol… what your describing is a spineless parent do not encourage child abuse and neglect

    • @Bonaboo
      @Bonaboo 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +52

      @@livenitup862so “gentle parenting” should just be called “normal, non-abusive parenting” then.

    • @deborahseri4746
      @deborahseri4746 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      the thing is thats what ppl were calling it at first but there was a lot of backlash and reject from it which sparked the conversation or what is abuse and a punishments and where do we draw the line. calling it gentle parenting allowed a better understanding. yk when it comes to discipline ppl r very defensive over it
      @@Bonaboo

  • @RainaVerlaine
    @RainaVerlaine 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    Younger gen z here (2008) and this entire situation just makes me so sad. I remember my dad reading to me as a little kid along with my mom and sister playing dress up with me and these kids just...aren't getting to experience that anymore. It's sad.

    • @niabelizaire3596
      @niabelizaire3596 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I’m a Gen Z kid too (2006) and it saddens me that these kids are more invested in technology than to actually pick up a book and read it or enhance their learning skills. I had access to the internet growing up, but I had other outlets: I always played with my Barbie dolls and occasionally and I sometimes took my took toys outside and played with them. I played dress up in my mother’s clothing as well and I remained a kid. If you think about it, we’re the last generation to grow up in the DVD/CD era. I’m going to college in a couple of weeks for English secondary education and it just saddens me that these Gen Alpha kids rather live in a virtual reality than to actually experience life in general.

  • @adhdlorde
    @adhdlorde 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +697

    Technology and quarantine had detrimental effects on younger gen z and gen alpha. I graduated highschool last year and literally everyone in my grade noticed how the freshman and sophomores acted and preformed significantly worse due to the quarantine. Freshmen will always be freshman but I was genuinely shocked by how terrible they were. I even see the effects of technology and the pandemic in myself. Im 19 now and many people my age can’t pass college level classes.

    • @kimora69
      @kimora69 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +41

      I agree but im 20 and it definitely affected us as well (was 16 when covid started).

    • @pipsli
      @pipsli 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +46

      same here, and it’s not just their academics that got stunted but also their social skills, never had I met such ballsy freshman, literally trying to bully the seniors 🙃

    • @Jane-ow7sr
      @Jane-ow7sr 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

      I'm 20 and graduated last year but even then I noticed it's not just the younger kids, it was the kids my age as well at the time (17 18 19) that couldn't even read at a 3rd grade level while I was over here reading at a college level in 3rd grade.

    • @bugsbunni4200
      @bugsbunni4200 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      Omg same. I’m a senior last year when j saw the freshmen I could see a huge difference between under and upperclassmen.

    • @TrueEnergizerBunnies
      @TrueEnergizerBunnies 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      Now imagine the effects on the little kids who were preschool age when the pandemic hit and they completely missed the most crucial time of social development. Those kids have no clue how to interact with other or read faces (because faces were covered with masks for most of their life) they dont know how to make friends and very core information that is the foundation for the rest of their education is missing.

  • @OpenMinded09
    @OpenMinded09 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +454

    as a gen z kid, living with 3 gen alpha siblings, i am doing everything i can to make sure they get at lest some support that they need. they are so obsessed with technology and have no dreams or aspirations at all because gaming consumes their lives. i myself was raised with the internet, and its not pretty to see my younger sibling go through the same mental turmoil i had to go through at such a young age due to the unrestricted access. during covid, I had to school them and missed some of my key learning to do so. I want whats best for them, because at this rate- im incredibly worried that they will go nowhere. this is a PARENTS job, not mine.

    • @Maya-zq8ew
      @Maya-zq8ew 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

      I feel you, it’s scary how much is out of our control.

    • @OpenMinded09
      @OpenMinded09 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

      @@Maya-zq8ew yep. if the next generation is ANYTHING like gen alpha (although i hope we would try prevent that) - we. are. screwed,

    • @nalbinalbii888
      @nalbinalbii888 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

      same, but only 1 2012 gen alpha brother. all he does is scroll on tiktok all day, repeat the stupid sh he hears online, and gets into trouble at school that i know is a bit due to his excessive use of social media. he's on his oculus all day playing gorilla tag and stuff, and literally he's so out of touch its saf

    • @Ash-nk8lk
      @Ash-nk8lk 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

      Your parents put too much on you! That is not your job to raise your siblings I’m so sorry

    • @waterwitch1690
      @waterwitch1690 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      I’m so sorry you have to be a parent when you never asked to be, I know it’s not your responsibility but your siblings are lucky to have you. You can make a difference ❤️

  • @CliffCardi
    @CliffCardi 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +356

    Millennials (myself) included think we’re taking the moral high ground by saying “I’m not gonna deprive my kids of smartphones and video games and iPads like my parents did! I’m not gonna be a hypocrite!” They end up raising their children differently (if not oppositely) than how they were raised out of spite.

    • @jenesishunter9674
      @jenesishunter9674 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      True Story 😅

    • @Rose-qj6eq
      @Rose-qj6eq 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      It’s not the millinials, a LOT of gen alpha is the product of gen z

    • @pixelmagicbeat8131
      @pixelmagicbeat8131 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +31

      @@Rose-qj6eq bruh 💀. Spot a millennial lol. If u r accusing the genz, then give sm proof.. its not our fault your kids got influenced from us... its your (younger millennial) job to ensure wht your child is watching and doing. It's not our responsibility since they r not OUR kids

    • @mynameisreallycool1
      @mynameisreallycool1 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

      ​​​@@Rose-qj6eq Most of us don't have kids yet. 🙃 I'm not saying that we'll be any better at parenting, but don't shift the blame on us for "influencing" YOUR generation's kids when you guys had every right to not give your kids unlimited access to the internet. Your kids shouldn't be watching us on TikTok or Instagram. It's YOUR job to raise your kids, not other people's jobs. This is like when parents in the 2000s blamed millennial celebrities (like Miley Cyrus or Britney Spears) for being a "bad influence" on gen z, even though those parents could've easily taught their kids certain values instead of relying on random teenagers on TV to influence us.

    • @bc9866
      @bc9866 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      It's not just Millennials. The early end of Alpha is Gen X and the currently youngest end is partial Alpha. This problem isn't going to go away in a single generation unless we change our policies and infrastructure. I'm afraid that these problems will eventually crop up where I live, so I hope we can find a solution and apply preventative measures before they do.

  • @desiagriffin9689
    @desiagriffin9689 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +46

    It’s officially time for LeapFrog’s to come back! I grew up with a single mother who had to work a lot and that was my iPad lol

    • @keyaunna.
      @keyaunna. หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      YES!!!

    • @niabelizaire3596
      @niabelizaire3596 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Oh my gosh, yes! I used to own a LeapFrog toy 🐸💚

  • @TheKnallkorper
    @TheKnallkorper 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +294

    I’m so scared for my daughters, who I am raising with intention to be smart, creative, independent thinkers. I worry who they will associate with and who will influence them IN THE REAL WORLD

    • @Love-eg2vf
      @Love-eg2vf 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

      Same. My kid has never had access to the internet at 7 years old. Crafts, reading, going to the park, playing pretend.

    • @alexiiconner
      @alexiiconner 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      @@Love-eg2vfthat’s how i’m going to go about it!!

    • @chrissmith635
      @chrissmith635 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ⁠how the hell are you gonna keep the internet away from a kid

    • @TheKnallkorper
      @TheKnallkorper 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      @@chrissmith635 did I say I was going to keep it away from them? No. I said I worry. Your comprehension skills are lacking.

    • @chrissmith635
      @chrissmith635 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@TheKnallkorper
      Lmao chill I wasn’t responding to you calm down

  • @SaintAvangeline
    @SaintAvangeline 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +548

    As a nanny, I’ve seen it all. I’ve worked with lots of different children very closely and this generation of parents are failures. A lot of these parents mistake permissive/passive parenting for gentle parenting. I also don’t think authoritative parenting is as bad as this gen of parents deem it to be. As a kid raised through authoritative parenting, I turned out just fine

    • @darkstarr984
      @darkstarr984 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +46

      It’s like how people claim they’re “unschooling” while not teaching anything, when unschooling is a specific method of constructing a curriculum, by letting a child’s interests drive the theme, and then developing ways to teach them concepts based on those interests.

    • @parisbunny3783
      @parisbunny3783 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Hell no authoritian parenting is fucking awful. Literally would raise sneaky kids and kids just trying to get away with things.

    • @Ash_W04
      @Ash_W04 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Sorry if this is a dumb question, but you’re a fan account of Saint Avangeline and not the actual singer, correct? I listen to Lilith so your pfp stood out to me

    • @Ash_W04
      @Ash_W04 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Oh wow it literally is you

    • @amberowo740
      @amberowo740 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +30

      I feel like it should be a mixture of both (gentle and authoritative). Its good to let them know their boundaries but kids shouldnt feel like theyre not allowed to show emotion. although this is pretty easily said in text but to actually do it is a lot harder. this is coming from a kid btw haha

  • @jervaise2441
    @jervaise2441 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +416

    As a '07 teen with a '17 cousin, I am appalled by her behaviour at times. She's barely 7 years old this year and she's twerking, reciting raunchy lyrics, trying to control her friends, and using her parents to her advantage. She also poses really 'sexily' in pictures. For example, arching her back, pouting her lips, and popping her hip out. It's not like my aunt and uncle don't try to discipline her, they do. Really hard, in fact. But she just does not listen. At all.
    Throughout years of observing (which was painful af), her behaviour is not only influenced by the internet or the parents. They themselves are encouraging each other to act this way. I would ask her as tests, if she broke something on accident, what would she do. All she said was, "It's okay, I can just ask my mommy to buy a new one". Insane.
    She has every gen alpha problem, short attention span, no manners, lack of discipline, and more. Although yes, she will greet people when entering a room, but thats the bare minimum. She can't read, she can't write, she only knows how to watch brain rotting Elsa-gate-esque videos and dance as if she's in a rap music video. Although my uncle and aunt have tried to get her off social media platforms, she always finds a way somehow.
    It's heartbreaking, because as her older cousin, I try to set a good example. Purposely reading books in front of her, doing my homework, trying to teach her how to read and write. Whenever I teach her how to read, she gets it first try. But after five minutes and I ask for a reread, it's as if I never taught her how to read at all.
    I'm sad, disappointed, and concerned for her and her generation. I love her as my younger cousin, but it just hurts me whenever I see her. I guess I'll just be glad she still gets excited over toys.

    • @atrofa1913
      @atrofa1913 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      Its also the family friendly cartoons on tv are just so crazy and everything they cuss on everything now goodluck keeping cuss words away smh its so hard to teach my son dont say that when everywhere we go someone's talking all loud and cussin 😢

    • @atrofa1913
      @atrofa1913 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      I have a 16 yr old and taught her same way I try my 6 yr old he just ain't having nothing its like he came out womb acting out I don't know what to do im reaching out for help cause it's just ridiculous and his teacher n school are worthless!!! The teacher is on phone all day is what my son says and she don't try and teach him anything never sends homework nothing 🙄

    • @my_name_is_rhyme
      @my_name_is_rhyme 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      That's one kid out of so many. This ISN'T the norm.

    • @OwenF-q3o
      @OwenF-q3o 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You have a sixteen year old kid?
      You talk like you’re really uneducated. No wonder you’re having parental problems.

    • @rockessence
      @rockessence 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      I can fully understand. I'm an italian millennial and I have a 4 yo nephew (5 in April) that acts dumb like she is 2. Her 1,5 yo little brother (2 in June) seems more intelligent of her, but only because he still does not have her smartphone problem, but symptoms are starting to manifest.
      About a year ago I tried to teach her how to draw a flower and after a little attempt, she wasn't good at doing anything but random circles. At first I thought it was my mistake. Maybe I was pretending too much for a 3 yo child. But at the same time, my girlfriend has gotten 1 colored draw of a flower and 1 decoupage of a paper cutted Christmas tree (we put on a frame each one) from her nephew that is literally the same age as mine (her is 1 month younger!). The only difference is that her nephew doesn't have a life that turns around a smartphone. In fact my sister is a millennial and my girlfriend's sister in law is a genZ.
      This Christmas I wanted to prove I was wrong and that is my girlfriend's nephew a genius. This time I tried just to teach her how to draw a star. At first she tried and apparently succeeded, but only if I was drawing step by step the star with her. After 15 minutes I just gave up because she became capable of doing anything other than the same circles of the last year. Like her mind entered in save energy mode. I don't know how to explain in other ways. She can't even colour a drawn lined picture, she just scribbles like there is no draw on the paper and she doesn't even understand what she has to do either if you start colouring in front of her.
      And all of these are things that my girlfriend's nephew just made 2 years ago.
      Every time I visit my parents I can see the gap between these two kids becoming larger and larger. And this only makes me sad for my nephews' future. Because their parents are the first who spend too much time in front of a screen.
      Last week my sister signed up my nephew for zoomba lessons. How can I describe how much cringe is to have in our family chat a video of her twerking and waving like she is a fully grown sexually active woman?

  • @taylorrplayz
    @taylorrplayz 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

    Back when I was younger I wanted hella justice, Barbie’s, monster high, phones, and my room re-done

    • @Ke_damon0
      @Ke_damon0 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Real, when I was younger I had a four foot tall monster high dollhouse and I’d play on that all day long! An entire shoebox of the dolls, and another one with clothes.

    • @niabelizaire3596
      @niabelizaire3596 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Same! Generation Alpha is growing up WAY too fast.

    • @jonelrobinson7432
      @jonelrobinson7432 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Same! I had Barbies and one Bratz doll and watched PBS Kids and Saturday morning cartoons when I was a kid.

  • @stephsteph4503
    @stephsteph4503 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +630

    I taught in Japan for several years, came back during the pandemic, and only taught for two school years before I quit teaching in the US. It's awful here-- the students, the parents, the admin, the overuse of tech in classrooms and homes to the detriment of actual learning. All of it. I have a one month old son and only watch stuff like this when he is napping. If we do watch TV in the house, I watch the Japanese news in the mornings to help me keep my level (I do speak Japanese to my baby so Idk, he might turn out bilingual), and my husband and I like to watch Chopped after dinner. That's it these days. When it is my time to watch baby alone (hubby and I switch off to get sleep or work), the TV is off and I am not on social media or watching videos. I hope it will help minimize his exposure. I'm a new Millenial mom, about to turn 35.

    • @bidencrimefamilymottof-cky953
      @bidencrimefamilymottof-cky953 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +87

      READ READ READ to your child!!! Limited or no baby talk. Talk to your child all the time. Driving - identify everything you see (Oh look to your left there’s a red car, blue truck, fast motorcycle, big oak tree, cloudy skies looks like it might rain today, what do you think?, etc). Preparing a meal (what sounds good for dinner today? Mac n cheese, salmon burgers, peas n carrots, etc). I had long hair when mine was a baby and he loved it when I did the metal head banger hair flip. We went to Denny’s restaurant at 3-4am so he learned how to sit up by himself, behave, and use manners with other people at a VERY young age. It all pays off in spades!!! Keep them busy with sports, music lessons, required daily chores + reading, they can take the garbage out (small bag w crumpled paper) as you walk out with them…be the example. Follow thru w EVERYTHING including threats (they need to know the rules and consequences) don’t do the counting to 3 thing. Remind them once the next time it’s consequences (stand in corner a couple of minutes). Don’t lie. (Santa was a rough one. Mine was crushed when I had to tell him I lied about it. But that was the only thing.) If they didn’t do well don’t say they did. Tell them it wasn’t your best and why. Mine appreciated having boundaries, good manners (we were complimented EVERYWHERE we went), lots of love and being able to depend on consistency in everything. Sorry I totally rambled but these things worked for me and my son. I miss him. He’s 31, happily married, working his dream job, $500k savings, paid cash for their $400k house and is just a really great guy who has tons of super close friends, would give you the shirt off his back, confident and respectful. He turned down a full football scholarship to join the military. He chose the toughest job/training and made it thru the first time. He lives 1500 miles away which is hard for me but he’s busy and happy. Oh-he also has no social media presence. Deleted them when he signed up 12 years ago. No doubt that’s a plus at any age. Good luck! Common sense goes a long way! You’ll be great!!!

    • @stephsteph4503
      @stephsteph4503 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +48

      @@bidencrimefamilymottof-cky953 I am specifically a former English Teacher, so ofc I read to him. He doesn't understand much yet, so I've been reading Walden before bed. You don't have to explain it to me; I have a Master's in education and 10 years in the field!

    • @Sarah_Bragg
      @Sarah_Bragg 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +30

      Keep going and good luck! Kids want to do whatever they see their parents doing, so try to be the person you want them to be

    • @bidencrimefamilymottof-cky953
      @bidencrimefamilymottof-cky953 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      @@stephsteph4503 glad you already know it all. Should be a breeze.

    • @yaeltuttebel
      @yaeltuttebel 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      Aaaah one month old😍 so cute, hope you're getting some sleep. I have a toddler and she gets maybe 5 minutes of screen time daily. And I try not to use my phone when she's around. It's totally doable!

  • @LourSims
    @LourSims 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +341

    I believe a lot of parent get gentle parenting and permissive parenting confused. Where instead of creating healthy boundaries, there are none. The whole concept is to empower your children and you can do so without letting them run rampant. I also think many of todays parents have taken the trauma from their childhood and internalized it to the point, where they don’t want anything to “traumatize” their kids therefor they do whatever. Overall it starts with the parents, hints why the children are suffering greatly.

    • @sunnyjoslynn851
      @sunnyjoslynn851 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      Not trying to be an ass at all, and maybe it was a typo, but in that last sentence, the word you were looking for is “hence” not “hints”. Hope this helps!

    • @Mack2279
      @Mack2279 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +51

      Omg yes! So many people think gentle parenting is just letting kids do anything. It’s more about actually talking to your kids and explaining things not just yelling at them telling them what to do
      Also I agree everyone is so afraid to traumatized their kids, which is good but unfortunately trauma in inevitable
      The best thing I ever heard about parenting was that it’s not a matter of if you will hurt/traumatize your child but how
      Because yeah it will happen but hopefully it’s something small and not huge

    • @LourSims
      @LourSims 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@sunnyjoslynn851 lol its okay, its just a think piece and a typo. So thanks 👍🏾

    • @livenitup862
      @livenitup862 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      THIS! Gentle parenting creates emotional intelligent childs!

    • @endieisded
      @endieisded 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I know it's so frustrating!

  • @bugsbunni4200
    @bugsbunni4200 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +306

    As a high school senior I can see the rift between the two generations. It’s crazy to see that there’s 12 year olds who are acting older than me and I’m turning 18.

    • @Dyslexic.D0ry
      @Dyslexic.D0ry 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +30

      Literally and their parents aren’t doing shit about it with they’re permissive parenting

    • @craftwareprincess
      @craftwareprincess 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +34

      You’re so true, I’m about to be an adult and I get mistaken for 12-14 years old due to these kids acting and dressing so grown.

    • @DreasTapes
      @DreasTapes 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Litterally! I know I'm only 16 but when I was in 7th grade, the kids were looking much and older doing extremely inappropriate things. I literally could not believe the things my friend was saying at her age! We were both 11, and I was so freaked out and disgusted. This generation is crazy. I'm so glad that I'm doing school online and found Jesus.

    • @Dyslexic.D0ry
      @Dyslexic.D0ry 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      @@DreasTapes see I was gonna like your comment until the last bit…

    • @annastarr2043
      @annastarr2043 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@Dyslexic.D0ryI did it for you

  • @Im_her69
    @Im_her69 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +32

    As an 8th grader my school got picked where I live to take a test to let the government know how much we learn. The students were randomly picked (about 20 of them) and when I found out my school got picked I already knew it was going to be bad. Lots of kids think they’re gangsters and every class i have there is only about 5 kids that actually do their work. It’s so sad what society has become..

    • @emma54699
      @emma54699 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I’m going into 11th and this is exactly how it is in my school. Kids think they are way too cool and like they don’t have to do the work cause it doesn’t matter.

  • @glwoomy
    @glwoomy 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +308

    As a 7th grader who's pretty unaffected by all of this being raised by decent parents and all, I feel really bad for the kids around me. There are barely any kids in my advanced classes (only around 15-20 in each which is pretty small for my school.) Nobody respects each other anymore. Don't even bother looking at anybody, either, because I almost got jumped by a girl for "looking at her the wrong way" (she also full on bumped into me without any sort of apology)
    Adding onto the topic of preteens/teens acting grown nowadays, a lot of us act like this is because of who we see and watch on the internet. Girls my age, including myself unfortunately, cant help but compare ourselves to 17-25 year olds with perfect skin and developed bodies. Personally, bullying and issues with my parents drove me to feel the need to act and look more mature than I am. I really don't like it, I can't actually be myself and enjoy stupid cartoons and stuffed animals. Everybody is watching shows like Euphoria and I'm still watching My little Pony.
    I hate being a 7th grader because I can't actually be myself

    • @destroya-bucket
      @destroya-bucket 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

      nooooo, you should be happy.. I'm in highschool, and yeah life sucks so much but you'll be fine. as soon as you realize you ain't gotta act a certain way, you'll be fine. idrk what to say but I just wantchu to know that it's gonna be okay. everyone is going through it, it gonna be okay. everything is gonna be okay in the end cause if it's not, then it's not the end.

    • @owenlyons76
      @owenlyons76 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      It'll get better. 7th to 9th grade was the worst time in my life and by 10th grade things were much better. 7th grade def sux just hang in there.

    • @kippershiba
      @kippershiba 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

      speaking from experience 7th grade like 90% of the time is the worst grade in middle school. it got better for me and it will for you too! :3c

    • @Found_Myself
      @Found_Myself 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +23

      Girl, My Little Pony was my LIFE until Friendship is Magic ended when I was 16

    • @ailumie
      @ailumie 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      You are very well spoken! I'm a senior now and remember 7th grade all too well. It really was a tumultuous time. I have two brothers and worked with kids your age and I can't imagine how I would've survived at 12-13, seeing the way middle school students like your peers are acting nowadays. You'll keep meeting people that challenge and frustrate you as you enter high school. It's frustrating to navigate but I've learned to find my own way to manage bad people (which is avoid them lol). In 7th grade I was really into Digimon and Roblox and I chose to indulge in that heavily, even if I was seen as weird or childish for it. It's actually become a conversation starter and how I've found several friends and even a relationship later on in high school. 😅
      As for body and confidence, I honestly can't say much for that; social media has influenced me a lot and I struggle with self image deeply. I can however say that with age I've begun to think more critically on why I don't like certain parts of myself and I've been able to cope better with my appearance because of it. Therapy also helped a little bit.
      You'll have a long journey ahead of you filled with self-discovery and experiences. Take your time and seek out and hold onto places and people that make you feel safe and content. This goes for online and irl.
      Keep bad energy out of your life. Good luck :)

  • @angelichobi__18
    @angelichobi__18 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +202

    I’m a Gen Z Kid myself (2005 Baby) and we grew up with the rise of social media so we’ve seen all the ups and downs of social media and seen how the platforms grew and thus have seen how these Gen Alpha kids are being raised. As Gen Z kids we know exactly what social media is like and what it can do to such a young mind which I hope will cause a lot of us to be better parents than millennials.
    My cousin was born in 2011 and he’s 12 now, my aunt raised him to be a kid. He went out to parks, played outside like a normal kid, and did normal kid things.

    • @alexiiconner
      @alexiiconner 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      yes, my kids are gonna play outside ❤ (2005 baby here too)

    • @angelichobi__18
      @angelichobi__18 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      @@alexiiconner same here, when I have kids I’m gonna let them have an actual childhood and their Brain isnt consumed by social media, I want them to actually enjoy life and not stress over useless shit that doesn’t really benefit them

    • @evenightmare4329
      @evenightmare4329 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      New Mama (baby born 5 weeks ago) i totally agree with you! I want my son to grow up without much internet use:)

    • @jasonolafami4528
      @jasonolafami4528 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      05 here too

  • @EluxeM
    @EluxeM 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +254

    It's not just Gen Alpha. I was a university lecturer until 2015. My students, who are now around 25-35, were generally incapable of critical thought, writing with proper grammar, and it was very obvious to me that they often bought their essays online. We were told to pass these students because if we didn't, it would reflect poorly on the institution. Things have only gone downhill ever since.

    • @zi6803
      @zi6803 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +40

      Maybe it's not the age, but the place. I am 31, with a masters degree, and everyone around me was able to think critically. If you did poorly, you did not pass, and several actually didn't (we went from 40 students to around 15 in the first few years). While it is true that children now struggle with things like reading a bit, I wouldn't say it's to the point where I would be worried. But I am from Europe, so maybe that's the difference.

    • @thalesan8790
      @thalesan8790 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      It’s the same in the US. At my institution, which is a top college to be transparent, you would fail quickly if you couldn’t get used to academic writing with a minimum of 5+ pages a week . It’s really difficult to not be graduate level here, but I’ve heard horror stories from 2nd-tier public universities

    • @ericah6546
      @ericah6546 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      That's such a shame to hear. At my college buying essays online gets students an F.
      The professors have programs that can spot most bought Essays and don't have to pass them. They are encouraged to put a stop to it. I'm really sad to hear about schools doing what yours is doing.

    • @x77punk77x
      @x77punk77x 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@ericah6546
      Any post-secondary education institution sanctioning academic fraud should lose any accreditation it has.

    • @Crayolapup
      @Crayolapup 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      That makes me mad because that tells me these kids cheated their way to success.
      Theres people who actually want to earn success

  • @peanutbuttachelly3544
    @peanutbuttachelly3544 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

    Our roommates have a four year old. They don’t read to him, don’t teach him skills like tying his shoes, they don’t play with him one on one - they talk to him maybe a cumulative ten minutes a day after they get home from work. They just turn on the tv or give him an iPad. It’s so sad. And shocker - he bombed his kindergarten skills assessment. His behavior he’s allowed to exhibit is shocking. Screaming, punching, intentionally breaking things. Zero attempt to curb that behavior. They laugh it off. It’s nuts. The kid doesn’t stand a chance.

  • @blaska7131
    @blaska7131 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +415

    I remember a study I read maybe 20 years ago about people working with computers, especially coders. They tended to be less social and impatient with others, and had higher tendencies of being anti-social. The theory/conclusions was that because they spent more time interacting with machines than people, they would tend to expect the same types of accurate and rapid interactions or responses from people, just like they did with machines. When that didn't happen, it created a lot of frustrations.

    • @jequirity1
      @jequirity1 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +28

      That doesn't rule out a selection bias, though. While technology use may impair social skills, it could be the other way around-- that impaired social skills could lead people to choose jobs in tech (where they will not require those skills).

    • @naomivought9317
      @naomivought9317 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      My ex is a coder and he’s one of the most understanding and kind people I know. We split on mutual terms btw lol. I think that feeding into social norms is a bigger issue than the physical screen themselves. He doesn’t follow any of that. I think if kids solely learned on screens and nothing else things would be so different.

    • @DeaDiabola
      @DeaDiabola 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@naomivought9317 my brother is working for a huge tech company and he would literally never even hurt a fly lol.

    • @blaska7131
      @blaska7131 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Well we see what learning and always being in front of a screen does to young minds. Try to take a screen away from an ipad kid and they react like an addict.

  • @kentuckyfriedmuffins2461
    @kentuckyfriedmuffins2461 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +530

    As a Gen Z (2006 baby, mid 2000's) I'm fully convinced Gen Z is the last generation to have a normal mostly happy childhood interacting with people.
    I was playing with tea sets and Play-doh acting like I was on Master Chef, I was playing with dolls, I was making memories just by watching my older brothers play Sonic the Hedgehog. I was bonding with my brothers over WWE, I was outside playing in the snow, I was bonding with my dad over country music. I was making my dad mayonnaise toast because I thought he liked it. I was making my friends bandaloom bracelets and getting scared over horror movies. I was watching Bubble guppies and the Powerpuff girls.
    I was over here getting excited about popping a Jimmy pop popcorn with my mom because it was a treat we'd get once in a while. I was putting a Luke Bryan CD into my CD player that my uncle would make for me to sleep with because I couldnt sleep without it. I was lending my room to stray pregnant cats, I was out interacting with the world.

    • @_matcha4
      @_matcha4 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +49

      We’re so old lmao, I grew up watching little Einsteins and handy manny.

    • @donaldbothe3518
      @donaldbothe3518 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +34

      2002 baby, this entirely.
      Playing with transformers, bonding with my dad over old 80s movies and pop culture and playing in the snow. Friends with my neighbors kids, birthday parties, playing super mario party on the wii, building snowmen and igloos, reading my dinosaur book till it fell apart, looking for bugs, bonding with my mom over history and intellectual topics and music.
      I am honestly glad it took a little while for the internet to penetrate my life, enough time to build interests to go in with and old enough that I didn't get sucked into social media too early and now mainly avoid it as a rule (Besides here, reddit, and a single cool facebook group). It honestly helped me bond with my grandparents more and become who I am today. It is a tol, not an addiction. I can look up those old pop-culture references, listen to music from the 1960s and 1970s, dig into family history, learn about coin collecting and old photography.
      Now i am looking at gen-alpha and remembering the stories of Gen Z members falling off the cliff of hood life and social media addiction.
      Now I am sad :(

    • @herkload
      @herkload 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      As an early gen Z (1998) I agree with you 😎

    • @flowers593
      @flowers593 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      As a 2007 baby I agree with all your points

    • @Drando1989
      @Drando1989 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Y’all woere born AFTER the millennium.
      Y’all don’t even remember 9/11 and where you were when the towers hit.
      That’s crazy.
      Your generation is DEFINITELY the beginning of the end.

  • @Jenb-pj9qc
    @Jenb-pj9qc 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +111

    As a millennial mom. From the gate we said absolutely not to tablets, cell phones, video games, and only weekend TV time.
    I was always ridiculed by everyone but my granny!
    I had to tell people that if they bought the tablet regardless that I don't care I'll throw it in the trash.
    People have been sounding the whistle about this for over a decade but we they were crazy.

    • @ih2439
      @ih2439 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yes, there is so much pushback and you’re vilified as if you’re the abnormal one for limiting your child’s exposure to electronics. Unfortunately Idiocracy is becoming a reality.

    • @stitches318
      @stitches318 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Funny no mention of ultra-processed food in this video. There are many studies done that the nutrient-deficient food that our children are eating is resulting in hormone and brain abnormalities. Brains need nutrients and they are literally starving. But if you try to limit junk food for your kid everyone calls you eating disordered, uptight, etc. They say 'just once' won't matter yet 'just once' usually occurs at least once if not multiple times per day. The average American child consumes 65 percent of their calories from processed foods

    • @bouncy_egg3706
      @bouncy_egg3706 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

      I suggest giving them a 3ds with some pokemon and cooking mama when they go into 1st grade! Both peaceful and very sweet. -an 8th grader :]

    • @Dan6-789zw
      @Dan6-789zw 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@bouncy_egg3706the switch isn’t that bad bruh and you can put parental controls on I’d recommend a switch with Pokémon Sword and Super Mario odessy - middle schooler

    • @ajjerio3927
      @ajjerio3927 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      As an adult, yeah. They should still have technology but it has to come with forced breaks and reading/enrichment time. Honestly, get children into puzzle games or something that forces them to intensively read and understand critical thinking.

  • @sophiasometimes9818
    @sophiasometimes9818 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    All of generation alpha hasn’t even been born yet and a lot of people are talking about them being doomed ….great job society

    • @socoamarettojustine
      @socoamarettojustine 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      yeah, my alpha kid isn't even 2 yet. he's def not doomed.

  • @sagebm
    @sagebm 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +287

    the ballet teachers video also made me cry. this is on the parents. there needs to be some serious laws put in place because this is not okay, and I only can hope that these parents can learn to discipline their children instead of giving up and giving them a phone screen instead.

    • @StephieGsrEvolution
      @StephieGsrEvolution 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      The ballet school could also have more strict rules over just taking people's money and kids no matter what.

    • @draalttom844
      @draalttom844 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

      ​@@StephieGsrEvolutionballet is strict but if you cant behave at some point you get kicked out. You pay for a course, kid needs to focus

    • @xiomaraortiz3571
      @xiomaraortiz3571 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Many parents are single and female. Their will be no consequences. Everything is working according to plan.
      Block the good fathers from their children to get these results. No one wants to have that conversation.

    • @username_creates6991
      @username_creates6991 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Crash courses. Parents should attend courses just like medics do or any field of work. We should learn more about parenting maybe even in school

  • @MagdalenaRay61
    @MagdalenaRay61 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +93

    I’m a Gen Z 2003 babe. I highly disapprove of generation alpha’s over use of iPad time. I’m 20 years old and I got my first iPad when I was 10 and I was disappointed. The mobile apps suck compared to Virtual Online Worlds and online games like club penguin, bearville, pixie hollow, and for educational games what happened the fun of jumpstart. What happened to playing with stuffed animals, dolls, toys. And What happened to imagination.

    • @venuslove-i1v
      @venuslove-i1v 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Sadly the toys are not for kids anymore either.

  • @ashleysartattack5600
    @ashleysartattack5600 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +260

    It’s wild. Im a millennial with no kids. But I started tutoring kids in my neighborhood in 2020. It is astounding how behind they are! One little girl I taught was 10yrs old. Didn’t know what her teacher’s name was. Didn’t know the name of her school. Didn’t know the name of the town we live in! Didn’t know the year she was born! Didn’t know her address.
    They sent these elementary age children home with a laptop to do schoolwork for 2yrs. They don’t know WHERE the keys are on the keyboard to type the first word. You cant tell me that parents arent doing kid’s schoolwork. Or they’re just not turning work in, and then just passing them to the next grade.

    • @jenesishunter9674
      @jenesishunter9674 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      True Story 😮

    • @Zvromi
      @Zvromi 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      That’s sad

    • @delilahispeachyfresh2835
      @delilahispeachyfresh2835 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      No way…. That’s actually scary

    • @simplysabrina5294
      @simplysabrina5294 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      this is so bad omg

    • @Roxanne-ew5qu
      @Roxanne-ew5qu 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      Where the hell do y’all live?! My kids school work is 10 times harder than anything I ever did at their ages. My first grader is reading chapter books and has vocabulary words like hyperbole and tentative. And don’t get me started on my 10th graders Pre-Calculus work…. That wasn’t even a class offered to me in 10th grade and I was in “advanced” math.

  • @LunarMarie
    @LunarMarie 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    I couldnt help but cry at the ballet teacher. Bless her for trying and caring so much. ❤

  • @kristibott2437
    @kristibott2437 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +353

    I am a gen X mom of four. My kids had iPads and even iPhones at a pretty young age. This is how we solved the problem…we spent as much time with our children as we could, but we also made it mandatory that our kids had significant extracurricular activities that did not involve devices. My oldest son is in college now and he chose concert choir/show choir/and school musicals. Now he has a full ride scholarship and is in jazz choir in college. My two middle daughters do competitive studio dance and cheerleading in high school and plan to try out for dance team in college. My youngest plays basketball for her middle school travel team. If any of them get below a B in any class in school, the phones/ipads/gaming is restricted or taken away. Doing these extracurricular activities is the solution, I’m convinced of it. They literally don’t have enough time for too many electronics. Bonus, they all LOVE the individual extracurricular activities they chose. It actually helps them learn to manage time.

    • @athena2229
      @athena2229 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      My mom was like you and i am so grateful for it (I’m an 05/19yo) You’re doing something right and we need more of that :))

    • @cherylberyl8227
      @cherylberyl8227 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      Why isn’t this getting more attention?

    • @donaldbothe3518
      @donaldbothe3518 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

      Here is an idea. While a B is a bit harsh, definately a C. However, it isn't like you can change it now, as getting a B is going to be a change of form. What I am saying is don't put on too much pressure. Speaking as an all A kid. Pressure is real!

    • @llcdrdndgrbd
      @llcdrdndgrbd 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

      @@donaldbothe3518every time I see you young ones saying taking away devices is “too harsh,” I cringe. It’s practically a reward not a punishment. People had perfectly happy childhoods before we put them in front of a screen as they were crowning.

    • @delicqte
      @delicqte 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      wow, lowk impresed

  • @HannahJohnson13
    @HannahJohnson13 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +364

    You can actually thank the “No child left behind” law that was enacted back during George W Bush’s 2nd term in the 2000’s. I was only in Elementary school at the time but I do remember the shift on how the school districts and teachers were when it came to teaching and passing students. I was lucky enough to have a parent who was an active reader and science lover, but I do remember being in high school and there were kids who couldn’t read well. And a lot of it had to do with the No Child Left Behind law. Teachers would literally just pass the kids along the grades without any attempt to helping struggling kids. So those millennial kids grow up with little education. So it’s no surprise that a lot of the gen alpha kids have a hard time in school (besides the pandemic and the iPad).

    • @MistressMichayla
      @MistressMichayla 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Yep. I can recall as well.

    • @fedoramcclaren4294
      @fedoramcclaren4294 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      Indeed...
      It appears to be many adults out here which find it difficult to decipher how to structure certain words in a sentence, such as "to" and "too" and "threw" and "through"...
      Reading some of the social media comments or even texts have been more difficult over time.
      I honestly think people are just spelling phonetically instead, or not looking at their spell correction on their phones and leaving the words which show up on the screen.

    • @Roxanne-ew5qu
      @Roxanne-ew5qu 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      My kids school work is much harder than anything I did at their age. They also have longer days with very little recess. My 1st grader only has ONE 10 minute recess after lunch. The rest of the day she’s seated at her desk. I remember having 3 play breaks a day. Morning recess, one at lunch, and one in the afternoon. I honestly feel like these days, parents/adults have less patience than our parents did. The inattention is troubling for all ages not just the new generation.

    • @keke1232998
      @keke1232998 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Great point. People been bagging on the kids saying they can't read and I'm always like and quiet as it's kept the parents can't read either 🥹

    • @chisomo8088
      @chisomo8088 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Really wish she had spoken more on this. I've heard about it in bits online, but I don't live in the US so I'm not too aware

  • @melanierose511
    @melanierose511 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +147

    I’m an elementary school teacher so this is my Roman empire. There’s no school to home connection. The parents are overworked and burnt out. Most of the kids have unsupervised access to everything. Nothing is kid based in the home. It’s all sad. I understand where it comes from and I don’t fully blame parents. I blame our American culture.

    • @DeLaTr0ll
      @DeLaTr0ll 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

      This!
      For parents who try to connect with their kids we are either viewed as weird or a potential babysitter.
      If I take my kids out it’s like the Truman show.
      If the tweens/ teens are out playing the police is called.
      For the parents trying we get push back from everyone.
      You say less screen time so we take the kids out for a walk and some idiot is texting on their phone and almost runs us over.
      It’s like that spider man meme where multiple spider men are pointing fingers at themselves.

    • @pear1ycur1y83
      @pear1ycur1y83 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The best thing u can do tho is not to irresponsibly have children when ur situation is dire. I'm not talking to the victims of sexual abuse. I'm talking to the majority who choose to be stupid. Plus there should be fundamental teachings or principles at such an early age if u "don't have time" for them

    • @GrabbandeseNuts
      @GrabbandeseNuts 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      As a history fanatic, I would say it's more like Sparta. Rome was the home of civilisation, not savagery.

    • @rheiagreenland4714
      @rheiagreenland4714 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I blame capitalism

  • @TuMadre6995
    @TuMadre6995 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

    shoutout to the little guy who sang his ABCs🤍 damn this was sad

  • @kaileymo
    @kaileymo 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +786

    Let’s be real. It’s not laziness, it’s capitalism. Teaching kids how to read and write takes A LOT of time and effort at home. Nobody truly has the appropriate time and money to raise children. Now, SOME of these parents will blame everyone and everything instead of self reflecting on whether or not they were actually ready for kids. It’s takes a village now more than ever and we’ve been isolated from our villages

    • @bprdgz
      @bprdgz 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +54

      So true about how it takes a village!!

    • @suziedeschene5069
      @suziedeschene5069 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +64

      Still waiting for you to connect what capitalism has got to do with this

    • @jahoytodiesforahoy4615
      @jahoytodiesforahoy4615 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@suziedeschene5069 ok ill hold your hand on this, the main way capitalism is strangling america is by giving parents basically no time. In rankings of first world countries america takes the #1 spot for longest wroking hours (on average) for adults, beating out even japan. Considering the long work hours combined with long commutes that generally leaves parents with 3 to 4 hours to make dinner, get kids to eat healthy food, help kids with homework the parent themself may not understand, clean the dishes, clean the house, take care of pets if you have any, prep lunches for kids tomorrow, all while supervising your kids horsing around, make sure the kids brush their teeth and wash behind their ears, put the kids to bed, then the parent still has to take care of themself durring all that, and being in bed by 9.30 to 10.30 if the parents wanna get that full 8 hours.
      Dont worry though, genZ sees this and the stats are saying 75% of them dont want kids so we'll have different issues soon enough 😅

    • @ikustoo
      @ikustoo 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +63

      “Lets be real. It's not laziness, it's capitalism.” “Now, SOME of these parents will blame everyone and everything instead of self reflecting”
      LOL

    • @babyalikinz
      @babyalikinz 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

      Capitalism...? Lol

  • @amandakorbe3773
    @amandakorbe3773 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +146

    Me becoming disabled was an amazing thing for my son and a bunch of the neighborhood kids because I worked with my kid and a bunch of the other kids. My home was always open to everyone for help with homework and tutor them. When parents work so much, you need a community and teach them to be responsible and productive people who can think critically

    • @mairin7057
      @mairin7057 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Wtf

    • @amandakorbe3773
      @amandakorbe3773 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      @@mairin7057 Me becoming disabled. Not him.

    • @elalovatt2751
      @elalovatt2751 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      I definitely hated sitting down to do my work in school but it's pretty scary to imagine how much more I would have struggled if parents and teachers weren't as involved in my learning. Although the circumstances were unfortunate I'm glad you encouraged them with their learning ❤ it does feel like almost all parents used to value education when I was younger and nowadays it's hit or miss.

  • @definitelynotcole4842
    @definitelynotcole4842 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +65

    Okay but can we take a second to say that the kid singing “Peaches” was so adorable and wholesome 💀

    • @confusedaf1112
      @confusedaf1112 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      I like the kid "rapping" the ABC's 😂

    • @definitelynotcole4842
      @definitelynotcole4842 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      @@confusedaf1112ikr he ate with that one 🔥

  • @screwed_up_screwball
    @screwed_up_screwball 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    I always hate the arguement "Well you're gen z you got handed a phone when you were a preteen" YEAH BABES AND I'M HERE SAYING THAT EVEN AT THAT AGE I WAS WAY TOO YOUNG! Like, as a product of being given technology at a young age, I am sitting here and telling you that it is bad! Even a tablet with parental locks still had me watching the most vile shit known to mankind. Not to mention countless groomers and pedos, liveleaks and hardcore p**n ON THIS APP
    Also I like how Gen Z, the generation known to be the most mentally ill, impulsive and craziest genration are becoming the best parents (at least in the people I've seen) because we understand and even first-hand experienced a lot of the negative things we were shown as kids. Like gentle parenting DONE RIGHT (communicating with your kids, explaining situations so they can understand why whatever they're doing is something they shouldn't be, allowing them to express all emotions, good and bad and big, showing them ways to regulate themselves or do something similar to the thing they're not supposed to do etc), censoring your kids faces/names from the media so that they're not being posed online without consent (after all, ANYONE AND EVERYONE can use the internet, including the most horrible people), freedom of expression and allowing your kids to be who they want to be and not who society expects them to be, and plenty of other examples. This isn't to say that Gen Z is the best generation, after all I am biased and there are a lot of kids my age that I loathe and detest with my entire being, but from I can see we're the most well versed in things like mental health, emotional health and communcation
    Edit: I revisited my favorite example of good parenting (Tiktok: Lauralove aka The mom of Jonah and Carter) and I realized it's called Montessori and respectful parenting. That's what I was referring to. Btw just need to mention that Laura and her kids are so wonderful and beautiful and amazing I wish I could pin the account to my entire phone so that every time I open it I only see her page)

    • @ameliawilson9074
      @ameliawilson9074 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Omg I LOVE lauralove. THATS how I want to parent. Setting boundaries and consequences yet instilling healthy relationships and emotional regulation- and most importantly avoiding taking anger/frustrations out on children. Her children are so well rounded- they’re intelligent, learning life skills (cooking & cleaning), interacting with the world, learning respect and manners, learning to be incredibly emotionally and socially aware and are growing a brilliant relationship with their mom and each other in doing so. Whilst ALSO having a great understanding of consequences and acceptable behaviour. Sorry that was long but omg I cannot say enough good things about that woman.

  • @hma2720
    @hma2720 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +170

    As an '07 Gen Z, the Gen Alphas that come into my work are always terribly behaved. They're messy, whiny, can't go without screens, demanding of their parents and of ME (cashier), and they've even destroyed things at my work as well. Their parents are almost always millennials, and they just reward the behavior by giving them "shut-up treats" like screen time, whatever desserts we have at my work, and sodas. One time a millennial's kids were literally climbing over the wall that sits in between two tables (it creates a little barrier in the dining room), dumping food onto the booth on the other side, and one kid had made it all the way over the wall and was smooshing the food onto the seat with their shoe. I went and cleaned it up and the mom gave me a dirty look. I didn't say a word to her, or her kids and I didn't give any looks to them. She was simply offended that I was addressing that the bad behavior existed by cleaning up. The reality is that my job is to clean what's dirty, and that table was SUPPOSED to be unoccupied, so I was cleaning it for the next person that was going to use it for eating purposes. Take that crap to the McDonald's playplace.

    • @hma2720
      @hma2720 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +22

      And I get that kids are going to make messes but to let your kids do ALL THAT in a place meant for eating is just WRONG.

    • @rhiannonh.7463
      @rhiannonh.7463 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      We need Cesar, the dog whisperer, to pivot to this with kids or Jax the cat whisper!
      They both say you can’t reward bad behavior, it reinforces the bad behavior.

    • @mobaray8784
      @mobaray8784 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@rhiannonh.7463 there's a whole South Park episode about Cesar "training" Eric, because he is such a brat and his mother doesn't know what to do anymore. And as the cherry on top, there is also a reaction on Cesar's TH-cam channel, where he reacts to that episode😂

  • @BarbiieDee4life
    @BarbiieDee4life 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +142

    I'm a 30 year old (apparently ancient) parent of a 9 year old and I'm happy to say that she still plays with toys, board games, outdoors, and loves to read! But I agree, I'm concerned about the way parents allow people heir kids to behave. Change starts at home.

    • @zvezdoblyat
      @zvezdoblyat 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Wait, so you had her at 21? How are you ancient? Lol
      Do you mean from her perspective? Because at around 8, I thought 20 year olds were old AF lol

    • @LongDeadArtist
      @LongDeadArtist 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@zvezdoblyat "APPARENTLY"

    • @KangwithoutaKangdom
      @KangwithoutaKangdom 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      ​@@zvezdoblyatyes lol. I am the same age with a daughter the same age and when i told her i didnt have a tablet, her response was "in the olden days." Tbf tho, shes very tech savvy, but also a smart, empathetic, straight a student and a talented artist as well. I couldnt be prouder, even if she thinks im an old lady😂

    • @wandat7275
      @wandat7275 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Ancient when you became a parent at 21? The average age someone becomes a parent is 27 years old, you might have been ancient in middle time but today you’re still baby…barely old enough to drink.

    • @candysketchezyt
      @candysketchezyt 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @KangwithoutaKangdom That's literally how I am! (Not the empathetic part, however.)

  • @kikkithewriter8607
    @kikkithewriter8607 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +175

    As a member of Gen Z raising a Gen Alpha, I absolutely prioritise non-digital entertainment for my child. I had phones before I knew how to use one, a personal laptop by 7 and a flat-screen TV in my room by 9. I am well aware of the dangers of technology. I have told myself I will never give my child a laptop of their own without child locks, and I will never have a TV or console in my child's bedroom. I will prioritise books and toys over ipads, and if they do watch a show I will ensure there is at least some educational content. I will not put on TV just to make my job easier. My toddler is currently pretty on track with learning and development, but if they ever do fall behind I will work with them to get them back up to speed. It is the parent's responsibility to do all of these things and we can't expect a teacher with 30 students to look out for our kid's development. We have to take it into our own hands and start the education at home.

    • @yaeltuttebel
      @yaeltuttebel 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      Completely agree with everything you said, I'm also a Gen Z'er with a toddler. My 16-year old sister and all her friends agree they will never have iPad kids, they know the dangers. Millennials not so much

    • @fruitytarian
      @fruitytarian 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    • @ShavingRazor
      @ShavingRazor 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Please keep going and never give up on your mission, your children will thank you ❤

  • @THErealOGse
    @THErealOGse 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    I graduated HS in 2003. Parents said no to their kids back then. Some of these kids don't get told no.

  • @lyrilsm
    @lyrilsm 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +322

    As a 7th grader living in asia i am genuinely shocked when the teacher talked about literal 8th graders not knowing how to tell the time, spell, and write 😦
    Also my opinion on my generation growing up too quickly, it's the beauty standards that really affects how we act. I constantly feel insecure about how i look and honestly at 13 turning 14 in november i still want toys but my parents will always say like "no, you're grown now you dont need toys" and i have adults constantly saying things about how i look and commenting on how i act and how 'immature' i am. I just feel like im constantly being judged

    • @livinmabestlife
      @livinmabestlife 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +46

      that sucks. i played with dolls until i was 14 and didnt like guys until i was 14. i always felt weird late bloomer ish. i am 36 years old now. please embrace that part of you. hold onto it sacredly. there is nothing wrong with you. it is completely normal.

    • @Littleme_iam
      @Littleme_iam 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

      im a eight garder and only 1/10 of my grade knows how to read clocks and some etachers even removed clocks and put digital ones up so we can understand and yes we dont know how to spell

    • @Idknlandwh123
      @Idknlandwh123 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I'm scared
      we are the same age, and while I could write and read in kindergarten, they don't know at 10< years

    • @dokusha519
      @dokusha519 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      You will always be judged, the secret is to not care that much, like the things you like and you'll be happy. For a brighter future you may abstain for a time, do your best and save up money as you find the route you wanna follow

    • @frm2686
      @frm2686 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      I’m in my 20s and I still build legos 😂. Don’t let people push you to grow up too soon, as long as you learn to be responsible and learn priorities you’re good to go

  • @yaeltuttebel
    @yaeltuttebel 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +80

    Amazing video. I'm a gen Z mom and I literally got rid of my TV lol. My daughter will NEVER be an ipad kid. Educating myself about screen time for children also made me realise how much I myself am addicted to screens. I was such a bookworm as a kid. I started reading book again and loving it

    • @GirlieCarolinas
      @GirlieCarolinas 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      What book are you reading in this comment section?

    • @Roman-bw2fo
      @Roman-bw2fo 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      ​@@GirlieCarolinasthis just in, apparently if you ever do anything other than reading, that means that you never read

  • @Hauswifewithaglock
    @Hauswifewithaglock 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +265

    I am a millennial step mom, I had to reparent my kiddos. They are both teenagers but how addicted they were to their phones and had such horrible attitudes. It took a couple years to get them to chill out and come back to reality. They are much happier than they were a couple years ago.
    What really shocked was how passive teachers are about school work. Yes there are learning difficulties kids have but there is no work ethic being taught at school or home. Everyone is giving up! We can’t give up! Parenting is tough but it is so worth the wait when you get to see life click for them.
    I hope all the comments I see about implementing change in the next generation. We need you! We need all new parents to wake up before our kids are lost to the system

    • @zayzay5490
      @zayzay5490 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      You did that for kids that aren't even yours?! Girl you deserve a medal and an all expense paid vacation where ever you want for as long as you want. I feel like your actions should be the bare minimum but a lot of people don't have half the amount of patience, compassion, and groundedness (

    • @Tamali01
      @Tamali01 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Could not agree more. The fact that kids are being allowed to progress to the next year whilst they are not meeting their level basics goes to show that Governments and Schools don’t care and have their own agenda. They don’t want a smart population that can think for themselves and is not able to be manipulated. They want sheep they can distract by the next thing and the next.

    • @PrincessMavenKittyDarkholme
      @PrincessMavenKittyDarkholme 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@zayzay5490 what's angst

    • @PrincessMavenKittyDarkholme
      @PrincessMavenKittyDarkholme 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      They are not disrespectful

    • @draalttom844
      @draalttom844 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      ​@@zayzay5490a medal for the minimum? A kid is a kid. You help them

  • @nonoescape8280
    @nonoescape8280 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    Thank you for your video, all the topics in it really need to be discussed more often. I have something to say about the last part of it.
    I'm Gen Z (2006), and when I was in elementary school, other kids bullied me for liking cartoons. Yes, I was bullied by other children for being a child and acting like a child when I was one. It was back in the 2010s, and I'm actually worried for Gen alpha. They are being brought up by social media and influencers, which means that they only see grown ups and children their age who look and act like grown ups. It breaks my heart to know that a whole generation is not allowed to be children or pre-teens. They have to be either babies or adults, nothing in between. The fact that they might get bullied for their 'not adult enough' interests online also makes the situation worse.
    If you're Gen Alpha and reading this right now, I want to advise you to allow yourself to be a child. I know that it is hard to do it when it means that you risk being kicked out of society around you. But trust me, it's much better to be yourself and not to be shy of what you're into, instead of lying to yourself and to others.
    And if you're an older generation, please do not allow yourself to bully children for being children. Children tend to make mistakes, and pre-teens can make mistakes, too, but it's okay because it's the age to experiment and try to find yourself in your life. Never laugh at them because of this. From my own experience, I can say that it might lead to awful long-term consequences, as I still have issues with self-esteem.
    P.S.: English is not my native language, so there might be mistakes, sorry. Wish you a great day!

  • @blue1907
    @blue1907 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +238

    A big part of the issue is not that parents don't WANT to be involved, but the cost of living is so high right now that they have to work so much to get by. Most of my friends with Gen Alpha kids have to rely on babysitters and/or family that just sit then in front of a screen. They try to do regular kid stuff with them but the excessive screen time has already done its damage.

    • @rgonzalo511
      @rgonzalo511 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      What damage

    • @lucid5208
      @lucid5208 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +48

      I'm 16 (2007) and I have a little sister who's 10 and I've tried and tried to get her to play the way I did as a kid, it's sad. But I've fixed the reading thing because she wants to watch one piece with me so she has to learn how to read the subtitles I'm lucky she likes anime.

    • @user-is7xs1mr9y
      @user-is7xs1mr9y 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

      @@lucid5208 you're a good sibling, keep it up!

    • @SamBaker-z9h
      @SamBaker-z9h 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      Yes and no. cost of living has grown so have salaries though. the issue is, people spend more than they need to- hair, nails, clothes, shows, bags, makeup, Starbucks, going out, new tech gear every year, cars, etc etc. people do not know how to save then whine they need moe money, cut out all the crap and watch you have enough.

    • @tsrocks2029
      @tsrocks2029 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@lucid5208the anime is probably part of the problem . It’s mind garbage

  • @aqkatsuki7540
    @aqkatsuki7540 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +201

    I'm currently 16 and I remember being 10 - 13 and acting my age!! I was still playing make believe, reading fantasy novels, listening to musicals, and drawing pictures for my parents. People my own age would MAKE FUN OF ME for doing all this, and when I would bring it up to the adults in my life they would tell me to be more mature!! While other people my age were already twerking, borderline having sex, and starting to do substances.

    • @princepark1013
      @princepark1013 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +36

      I feel like the way people define maturity is by superficial things. Maturity should be about being a good human. How you treat others and being able to manage yourself and stuff. I don't care about the superficial things like apparently 'mature' interests or looks.

    • @copat149
      @copat149 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

      You are a good person. Continue to do these things. Im in my 30s and I still draw. I read fantasy novels (even picking up YA novels and fantasy from time to time). I love listening and watching musicals. Being mature is not about throwing away “childish” things, but throwing away childish thoughts. (Aka keep what makes you happy and understand that “child-like” hobbies are for all ages)

    • @darkstarr984
      @darkstarr984 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      I’m 27, got treated the same as you for the same things. It wasn’t cool to *enjoy* anything.

    • @CoffeeaddictWriting
      @CoffeeaddictWriting 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      I went through the EXACT same thing :( I'm 22 and it's only taking maybe the last couple of years to stop being ashamed in my hobbies. Hell, I remember being told that I was "too immature" even as young as 7 or 8, even by ADULTS, for playing the wii and stuff like that.

    • @waterwitch1690
      @waterwitch1690 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Only children are afraid of being seen as a child. Adults who are comfortable with themselves do whatever they love. Hold onto your inner child💕

  • @redolentblossom
    @redolentblossom 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +227

    the little girl singing peaches peaches peaches was so cute omfg... i had to pause and hold my heart. i truly hope these kids will be okay

    • @jaydenlenzy3487
      @jaydenlenzy3487 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +28

      That boy was the most normal one out of all of them.

    • @Dan6-789zw
      @Dan6-789zw 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +28

      Still sad how he was the only normal kid he’s only in Pre-k💀

  • @RangeGleasry
    @RangeGleasry 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    The young ballet teacher crying broke my heart. Her reaction is CORRECT

  • @heartbitez_
    @heartbitez_ 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +176

    I’m turning 17 and just watching gen alpha act the way they act and grow up the way they do, it honestly makes me feel better about myself- even if that sounds bad. It’s actually sad to see what’s happening to them and to think that it might affect their lives or the lives for their own kids in the future.

    • @Window4503
      @Window4503 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      I wouldn’t feel too good…remember we’ll need care as senior citizens and that includes needing people kind and selfless enough to help and be patient with us

    • @SamBaker-z9h
      @SamBaker-z9h 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      I'm 44 so the tail end of Gen X. we said that about millennials and whatever the F came after that. every generation gets worse and it has slowly grown to be this monster because of social media. Wait til youre 44 (it'll come faster than you think- esp after you hit 25, life flies by). you'll see.

    • @tarmlktea4699
      @tarmlktea4699 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@Window4503 idk about yall, but i’m going to continue to care for myself until the day i die. i want to live a good and healthy life so i won’t need anyone to care for me and my life won’t be put into someone else’s hands

    • @hanestudante8819
      @hanestudante8819 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      I actually think that millennials are worse than gen z

    • @cherryivana1129
      @cherryivana1129 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@hanestudante8819do you care to explain? I’m a Gen z (2000)

  • @CassandraMzizi
    @CassandraMzizi 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +83

    I am glad i was born in 2004 and that my mom is a baby boomer 64. She did a form of gentle parenting. She had boundaries and rules and you ALWAYS respect your elders.
    She also believed in "if you embarrass me then I embarrass you!" So always be respectful to me and I will respect you.
    I was always allowed to express myself and when she was in the wrong she would be the 1st to apologise
    Love her lots❤❤❤

    • @JelissaGonzalez-bv7cr
      @JelissaGonzalez-bv7cr 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      I don’t think people understand what gentle parenting is.

    • @CassandraMzizi
      @CassandraMzizi 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@JelissaGonzalez-bv7cr ?

    • @ganpsao
      @ganpsao 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      ​@@CassandraMziziI don't think they're dissing you, don't worry.

    • @CassandraMzizi
      @CassandraMzizi 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@ganpsao :)

    • @Analymous
      @Analymous 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Wild that our mothers were both born in 1964 but I was born in 1984 and you were born in 2004.

  • @chel9064
    @chel9064 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +102

    I was flabbergasted when my son came home from his first day of kindergarten talking about his classmates having phones and he wanted one. I told him no thats not going to happen. I'm pretty proud of my son, he plays outside and loves to read and even learned how to write his name in cursive before the rest of the class even started practicing it. Hes in 2nd grade now and hes well behaved. I have a feeling its better he goes to a small school in a small area.
    I also blame alot of this on parents not monitoring the amount of screen time and what they are watching. Along with every parent telling their child they can do no wrong, ie no disciple with staying on a schedule.
    As parents we need to do better and tell our kids "no" more often.

    • @bouncy_egg3706
      @bouncy_egg3706 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      As an 8th grader im kind of grateful of that, you seem to be doing a good job. Maybe set him up for the enrichment program like me when i was young :]

    • @angel2641
      @angel2641 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      If you can afford a private school maybe even better. It’s really the only way these days to keep your kids a little bit more sane. Because even if you teach them the right way. They will get influenced by their peers. Talking from experience.

  • @t.5041
    @t.5041 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    i think we tend to forget that parental behaviors are often repeated… the parents letting their kids listen to the music they grew up that way..