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Parents get advice on managing kids’ summer screen time

5 hours ago
Parents get advice on managing kids’ summer screen time

As U.S. schools let out for summer, AirDroid Parental Control is urging parents to set digital boundaries early, saying the first two weeks of vacation are the easiest time to avoid device-related battles. The company is promoting structured offline windows, app-level limits and weekly family check-ins as ways to reduce conflict and keep screen time under control.

Why it matters: - Summer break often brings a sharp rise in children’s screen time as classes, homework and after-school activities disappear. - Screen-time conflict is a common source of family तनाव during school breaks, making boundary-setting a daily issue for many parents. - AirDroid Parental Control says the first two weeks of summer are the key window for establishing habits before routines harden.

What happened: - AirDroid Parental Control, a family safety platform, released guidance for parents as summer vacation begins across the United States. - Olivia Carter, a Digital Parenting Specialist at AirDroid Parental Control, said parents should set limits now rather than wait until later in the summer. - The company said the goal is not a device-free summer, but a summer in which technology fits the family’s rhythm. - Parents can learn more at AirDroid’s parental control page.

The details: - Common Sense Media says tweens average 5.5 hours of daily entertainment screen use during the school year. - Common Sense Media says teens average more than 8.5 hours of daily entertainment screen use during the school year. - AirDroid said those numbers typically rise during unstructured holiday weeks. - AirDroid recommends three strategies: structured offline windows, app-level limits and a weekly family check-in. - Structured offline windows can be set for predictable times, such as the first hour after breakfast or the hour before dinner. - AirDroid said consistency matters more than duration, and even 60 minutes of offline time can help reset attention spans. - App-level limits can curb high-engagement platforms such as short-form video and mobile games without fully removing access. - A five-minute Sunday check-in can cover what worked, what felt unfair and what should change. - AirDroid said children are more likely to comply when they feel heard. - AirDroid Parental Control offers scheduling, per-app time limits and weekly usage summaries. - The product is developed by Sand Studio. - AirDroid Parental Control is designed to help parents monitor screen time, manage app usage, track location and receive safety alerts.

Between the lines: - The guidance reflects a shift away from hard bans and toward predictable routines that are easier for families to sustain. - The emphasis on collaboration suggests that conflict often comes from the way rules are introduced, not just from the rules themselves. - The company is positioning parental controls as a communication tool as much as a restriction tool.

What’s next: - Parents entering summer break are likely to test new rules immediately, before screen-time habits become entrenched. - Families that want fewer arguments may need to adjust limits over time rather than rely on a single set of rules. - AirDroid is steering parents to its tools as a way to put the advice into practice quickly.

The bottom line: - The fastest time to set summer screen-time rules is now, before kids and parents settle into conflicting routines.

Disclaimer: This article was produced by AGP Wire with the assistance of artificial intelligence based on original source content and has been refined to improve clarity, structure, and readability. This content is provided on an “as is” basis. While care has been taken in its preparation, it may contain inaccuracies or omissions, and readers should consult the original source and independently verify key information where appropriate. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or other professional advice.

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