JCL666
absurdism
- Sep 23, 2011
- 2,190
I agree in part but you must admit that sometimes youngsters must feel a little stifled, just by say well meaning yet over protective parents and perhaps even society as a whole, I cannot be sure of the current threshold these days where children might play, loiter, laugh, good forbid get into some mischieve on their own, is it 10, 11 or 14 I am guessing the age increases each year and no doubt with each national tragedy or scandel ??
There hardly seems a time when up to a certain age there is never adult supervision, which in turn results in reports back and sanctions by the relevent supervisor to the associated parent and so on, it dumbs down play and perhaps childrens own natural interactions.
This just isn't the case.
There isn't really a set age regarding children being unsupervised e.g out on their own, or babysitting or walking to school. The NSPCC suggest that kids under 12 should not be left on their own. I think some schools in Brighton ask that kids do not walk to school unaccompanied until they're 9 or 10.
However....Regarding kids being out on their own in their own social time without supervision. Talk a walk around town and you'll regularly see kids from 11 upwards (secondary school age) wandering about. Same goes for parks or other areas where they might congregate after school.
In addition there are kids from 10 upwards hanging out un supervised, just less of them which is understandable.