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Facebook: Should parents 'friend' their children?

Facebook: Should parents 'friend' their children?

By Jimmy Smallwood BBC Radio 5 live

When Facebook was entirely dominated by people under the age of 25, things were

simple. But now an important social question has arisen - should you "friend"

your child, or accept a parent as a "friend"?

For a generation brought up on social networks, your "friends" can range from

closest confidants to someone you met at a conference.

People you've "friended" for networking purposes are afforded equal status to

your sister.

Your friends on social networks might also be your 20-something son who's

travelling round Thailand or your 13-year-old daughter.

These are tricky waters for a parent to navigate, unsure of security settings

and wary of others on the internet. If you are on Facebook, should you be

friends with your kids?

"It's hilarious to say, isn't it? That my child is or is not my 'friend'," says

Susan Maushart, author of The Winter of Our Disconnect, about her family's

six-month detox from technology.

As well as spending vast amounts of time on Facebook, her children weren't

making eye contact or talking to each other in person. Maushart attempted to

claw back some parental presence and influence by "friending" her three

children.

Two rejected her outright. One daughter accepted her request, but only after

introducing strict boundaries, prohibiting her mother from commenting on photos

or criticising.

The Stewarts The Stewarts give each other space

This helped prompt Maushart's experiment in disconnecting her household for six

months. Six months away from technology radically changed family relationships,

and now Maushart has forthright opinions about the role of the internet in the

family.

The danger is that through a lack of involvement or understanding in their

children's social networking, parents begin to feel, as Maushart did,

"powerless, irrelevant and rejected".

So should a parent "friend" their offspring on social media to keep an eye on

them?

"If that was your intention as a parent, to use Facebook as a form of

surveillance, I think that's wrong," says Maushart. "That's an invasion of your

child's privacy and they should reject your 'friend request'."

Lindsay Stewart, 15, completely understands why you'd refuse a parent's friend

request. Her household have agreed on not becoming Facebook friends.

"Mum said that she was going to get on Facebook," Lindsay says. "She said she

wasn't going to ask to be friends. Me and my brother were relieved."

Private community

Lindsay's profile settings are quite private, and while there may be nothing

obviously embarrassing or secret being discussed, it's not a place she wants

her mother to have access to.

"It's a community," she explains. "Our parents aren't there in our groups in

school."

Lindsay then mines the streak that leaves the likes of Maushart feeling so

disempowered.

"I primarily joined Facebook to have conversations with my friends. My mum is

my mum. I like her, but she's not necessarily what I'd call my friend."

"Mum" is Sandy Stewart, a 50-year-old Indiana-born mother of two now living in

South London.

The Harnesses The Harnesses are happy to be friends

Mrs Stewart has strong, pre-defined opinions about what role a parent should

play on the world's biggest networking site - stay well away from your

children.

"I wouldn't dream of being friends, there's no way," Mrs Stewart insists, and

suggests attempts at "friending" could seem like an invasion of privacy.

Facebook, as her kids use it, is their world. What they comment, chat or post

on there is tantamount to what they choose to include in a text message or say

to each other at school.

"No parent has had this access to their kids' thoughts and movements and

conversations before," says Mrs Stewart. "Just because it's now technological,

I don't think it means that we should."

Lindsay says there is a similar level of privacy inherent in texts and

Facebook.

"If my parents were to read my texts, I think anyone would be angry. It's the

same thing, having a conversation or uploading pictures on Facebook."

Yet Tim Harness, 54, and his daughter Josie, 18, are "friends" on Facebook and

perfectly happy. Josie left home in the summer for university in Plymouth, and

Mr Harness can see her student existence unfold online.

"She puts on loads of photographs I have a little look now and again," he

explains to me. "It's quite fun to see who her flatmates are. She seems to be

having a good time."

Josie tells me it's reassuring to know that her father's checking up on her

occasionally. She has plenty of family friends and what they see on her profile

doesn't concern her.

"The worst [dad might] see is a photo of me a bit drunk," she says. "Is it an

invasion of privacy? Not really. Everyone has Facebook these days. The only

reason you wouldn't want them is if you've got something to hide, if you don't

want them to see what you're doing."

41. swimdmj

10th December 2010 - 12:21

My mother (61) is on facebook, but only so that she can access my brothers

site. He is travelling round the world on a yacht with his family so it means

that she can see photos and keep in touch. I also took a straw pole on my

facebook site as to whether I should allow my son to be friends with me. The

prevailing thought was no, so I rejected him, so I guess it can work both ways.

40. stu0rt

10th December 2010 - 12:20

It's worth pointing out that both parent and child should check their privacy

settings, as knowledge of family relationships can be a help to fraudsters (who

might be happy to obtain your mother's maiden name, for example). I am friends

with my sister and nephews, but I do not use the "family relationship" part of

Facebook, so the link between us is not obvious to outsiders.

35. whysopuddi

10th December 2010 - 12:04

My mum added me on fb and I regret it so bad! I now have to friends lock most

of my posts.

She reposts ALL of my photos which is really embarrassing AND she comments on

other people's posts talking to me because she doesn't understand fb properly.

Worst of all is she brings personal arguments to the public realm and tries to

humiliate me. But i'd feel bad to un-friend her, she'd get mad!

31. MrBe

10th December 2010 - 12:02

I refuse to accept any member of my immediate family as my facebook friend,

purely from the perspective that there are some things which i might want to

say, but not necessarily want to inflict on my family. For example, my mother

doesn't really need to know the events of a night out on the town. My parents

get an edited and censored version of events when i speak to them on the phone.

Plenty

27. AlexiSacrifice

10th December 2010 - 11:59

I 'friended' my parents and Granddad on Facebook, as they requested, and I

would've felt really bad denying them my 'friendship,' however, the first thing

I did after accepting them as friends was to go into my privacy settings and

ensure that everything I post is hidden from them.

I don't like the idea of them reading about everything I do.