Then I would like to ask again, should the child be taken away from the scene immediately, go home or be pulled outside the store to let the child sort out his emotions, or as a parent, choose the fastest screen parenting to calm the child down? You are very busy, your child is interacting with you, and you are also swiping your phone or iPad. Does your child follow your example? Seeing the comments at the bottom of this APP , the child should be angered without an interesting companion---the mobile phone is so fun, it is a sense of achievement to play the electric game to break through the level, the parents scold me for the frustration, study in school is slow and difficult Boring; chatting with friends on the phone is so warm, and being with my parents will only scold me and belittle me.
Why can adults get addicted to mobile phones, but children can't? I'm sure you've all seen parents who take care of their children while swiping photo color correction services their phones. Even if you let your children contact and get used to 3C very early, if you can accompany them to spend a quality parent-child time, you can actually pull them back a little. But what I often see is that the working hours of adults are very long, and the children are also in school for more than 10 hours.
When the adults go home, they only ask the children about their homework, and the parent-child relationship is tense. Adults work all day and want to use their mobile phones to make fun of them, and it is very reasonable for children to think so too? When I was a teenager, what I hated the most was that adults only asked me if I had done my homework and whether I did well in exams; I didn’t care if I was happy at school, whether I had fights with my classmates (there were really fights in middle school and middle school), whether I did what.





