Is it safety? Is it security? Or is it just cool?
Have you ever noticed how many kiosks have popped up in
you favorite mall? And just about all of them are selling cell phones.
Teens can actually design their own graphics and have the graphic
airbrushed on the face of the phone itself. They face plates and
antennas that light up on each ring. Just drop by a kiosk next time
your at the mall, you'll see what I mean.
In a resent Los Angeles Times article, they stated that
teens with cell phones were at around 16% on average. I think by 2005,
it will more of an average of 50% or even more.
Cell phones seem to be a great security feature for the
parents. They can now be 'connected' to their children 24 hours a day,
7 days week, and 365 days a year. And of course, it allows the child to
dial 911 if an emergency arises. And now with the GPS Location
Sensitivity feature, your child will be located during that emergency
with ten feet of the phones location.
Of course, with all this technology and added security,
there are a few problems. The school systems are being cluttered with
phone calls in the middle of class. And there is always the problem
with calls in the hallways and bathrooms going on continuously. Most
schools are adopting the "use it during school - you loose it" policy.
This has become a real burden on school administrators. Their parents
as far as carrying the phones themselves back the children. So this
isn't something they can take away and keep until the end of the year.
They must give the phones back at the end of the day. This is usually
enough of a deterrent to keep them off during school hours.
If children and most adults new to cell phones could just
remember to put their phones on silent or vibrate alert, these problems
would never occur. These are the same issues with many other public
places including movie theaters. Of course, it's easier for some
wearing a belt to put their phone on vibrate, then you still know if
the phone rings or not, regardless if you answer it or not. But for
most women, they usually don't wear belts, this creates a problem. If
the phone is in any mode other than "ring", they never know, (without
checking from time to time), if they have missed a call or not. So
usually, the phones are left in the "ring" mode and probably on load,
sitting somewhere in the bottom of a purse. Even with the purses with
the little pocket on the outside for the phone, the phones are still
left in the "ring" mode.
How do you keep your child from talking you out of
house-n-home? If you think about how your child may get on the home
phone and talk for hours if you let them. What if they did that on
their cell phone? There is one answer. But this might limit your
ability to get in contact with them when you want to.
Some ideas:
1. Using a prepaid phone instead of using a shared plan,
(it costs anywhere from $0.30 to $1.00 per minute talk time). You give
them a certain amount of minutes per month. After that, it's up to them
to use their allowance money to up the phone time. These phones are
usually cheap and not as fancy as some of the newer models.
Using this technique is also useful on determining how
responsible they may be with a checking account in the future. If they
are out of the allotted minutes within the first week of the month,
this might reflect in bounced checks in the future. And can also help
to ingrain the use of saving up for that rainy day: If the child
doesn't use all their minutes this month, they will have that many more
minutes to use the following month and so on. Just like saving money in
the bank. If you spend all your allowance in one week, you won't have
anything for the next three, but if you save now, you have twice as
much to spend next month. And so on, three times as much as the
following month. (Hmmm, so what could you buy if you were holding three
months worth of allowance)? Think about it.
Parents can recharge the phone each month as part of
their allowance. This gives children a feel for having a checking
account! Because, when it's gone, it's gone! This will hopefully build
a level of responsibility. Or this could possibly make them want to go
out and get a job to buy more minutes. Either way, it has the potential
to help them coup with the world ahead of them.
2. Shared plans from your current provider. This is the
cheapest way to go. But, if your child is not yet responsible enough
not to over use, then your in for an interesting surprise at the end of
the billing cycle. With most of these plans, you can get anywhere from
$0.07 to $0.12 per minute. And with most carriers, the plans include
either 1000 mobile-to-mobile minutes, which means if your child calls
someone else on the same cell provider as you, the call comes off the
1000 minutes. Some even have plans that mobile to mobile are unlimited.
And many of the plans have free night and weekend plans. Which would
mean, you might never get the child off the phone over the weekend!
Remember one thing: It's hard to keep up with what minutes where used
when and how, so you would have to check with your cell provider from
time to time to see where you are on the minutes you have available.
Most services have a number you can dial, and a computer voice will
read off the time you have used for the current billing cycle. And most
of these plans will require a one to two year contract which might cost
as much as $100 to $200 to break. So if you decide that the family plan
isn't working out like you thought, it might cost you up to $200 to end
that contract. Most of these plans will also have an activation fee,
they usually charge anywhere from $30 to $50 per phone being activated.
And of course, don't forget one really important thing: You have to buy
the phone! This always helps to you the service. And this is probably
going to be something the child will want to pick out.
One note about cell phone time-sharing. If you have a
family of three using a shared plan of 300 minutes per month, and your
child decides to use 300 minutes of talk time within the first 3 days,
for the rest of that month you will be paying anywhere from $0.35 to
$0.60 per minute for every call! This might not even be a
responsibility factor: What if your child calls a friend that he
thought was on the same cell carrier. Which, if you have the 1000
minute mobile to mobile or unlimited, this call wouldn't count against
your plan. But if his friend was wrong about the carrier, you get bill.
(I've actually done this)! And I never checked my time
because I use a program that does that for me. I just enter in the
numbers I think are unlimited, and the program never counts those
numbers. Well, if you get that wrong, it can bite pretty hard at the
end of the billing cycle when you see that pretty bill.
A note about roaming fees. If you aren't in your "area"
as defined by your cell service provider, you will be charge a roaming
fee for incoming and outgoing calls. If your plan doesn't include a
national calling plan, you will be charged anywhere from $0.45 to $0.80
per minute for those calls. So be careful.
3. Prepaid phones.
Simple, you buy a phone and then buy minutes as you need
them. Most will include roaming and nationwide coverage, ("Roaming" no
additional fees for your current location, where ever that might be and
"Nationwide Coverage" just means no long distance charges). These
phones don't require any contracts, so this means you can cancel at any
time without paying any cancellation fees, which can be anywhere from
$140 to $190, depending on the contract length you signed up for
originally.
These phones don't require a credit card or even a
checking account. If you have the cash in hand, you walk away with a
cell phone and a certain amount of usage time. It's just that simple.
3. Disposable phones. Yes, disposable! They're going to
have many up sides. Just to name a few: They are setup the same as the
prepaid phones, no possibility to get a LARGE phone bill at the end of
the billing cycle. No roaming or long distance charges, some won't even
work if you leave the activation area, (be careful on this one, mainly
if you are getting one for emergency use). No contracts to deal with
and no activation fees, or credit checks.
The bad side, no call waiting, voice mail, or SMS (Small
Message Service) capabilities. And you'll pay a higher per minute
charge, just like the prepaid phones. In a way, these are prepaid
phones, just cheaper. And you probably won't be able to sale an old
phone on eBay, even if it's in good condition.
They are soon to be introduced at a price of around $40,
which gives you the cell phone and about 10 minutes of talk time. This
also includes the charger and a headset.
These little phones can be recharged with time by either
buying a scratch-off card that resembles a lottery ticket. After
scratching the card, there is a PIN number, you enter it into the
phone, and your minutes are updated. Parents will also have the ability
to call in and update the minutes if need be. The minutes expire just
like the prepaid phones, but they are saying it's set to every six
months. If you update your minute balance, the phones won't expire. The
current price per minute, $0.25 to $0.35, depending on the phone your
purchased. And of course, the downside is with a regular cell plan, you
would probably pay around $0.15 per minute or less.
These little phones are soon to be sold in department
stores to convenient stores. No check or credit cards are need. If you
have the cash, you can have a cell phone.
And when your done with the phone, you either throw it
away, or recycle it. (You might want to recycle the battery at least!
Depending on the type of battery, most States have laws that describe
how to properly dispose of rechargeable batteries.
Things to keep in mind when buying a cell phone for a
child: With most all of the newer phones, you can send and receive SMS
(Small Message Service), which means the phone is also capable of
sending and receiving email from the web. Some of the phones allow
Internet access just like your home computer. Some phones will display
graphics; this means "all" types of graphics. Some phones will take
low-resolution pictures. These pictures can be sent to anyone that can
receive a picture via SMS or the Internet. What if a picture was taken
in the Physical Education dressing room at school and sent across
campus and off through the Internet. Do you get picture?
There have been many complaints in school about this type
of Hi-Tech bullying. You have to make your children understand the do's
and don'ts of the new technology. Make sure your child isn't being
bullied and make sure your child is being the bully. All this new
technology needs to be monitored when children are at play. Just like
your home computer, you must be careful where your children are going.
One simple way of tracking who your children are calling, even on the
prepaid phone models is to check the call history. Some phones allow
you to set the call history at to save up to the last 999 phone calls
made. Other phones may only go up to 100 or even less. You can check
that history and see who they called, when, and for how long. You can
see if it might have been late at night when they should be sleeping or
if the call was made in the middle of a class at school, which could
denote skipping classes, hey, you never know. But there are many ways
to find out what your child is up to just by looking at the phone
history. It tells you much more than just a bunch of numbers!
Just remember, most of these camera phones can send and
receive pictures, inappropriate material can also be sent and received.
Just be aware of this.
Most phones will access the web just like your home computer. This means graphics of all kinds can be viewed.
If the phone will send & receive text messages, SMS, it will have the ability to send & receive Email.
Many plans have free night and weekend minutes, but make
sure your child understands the company definition of "night and
weekend," Most start around 9 p.m. and end around 6 a.m. the next
morning. And your weekend minutes begin around 9 p.m. on Friday and end
around 6 a.m. on Monday. Incoming and outgoing text messages, incoming
and outgoing calls, Web access, and special features such as
downloading games, screen savers, and ring tones all costs money or
costs part your cell minutes. Just make sure your child understands
that before it becomes a co$tly argument. Most of the horror stories
I've heard about where a child ran up $1000 or more in cell phone bills
within one month is usually a case where the child thought they were on
free minutes of some kind, but were not.
Cell companies have confusing plans for a reason, to get
you to spend more and make it difficult to keep up with peak minutes
used. Most services have free mobile-to-mobile calls. If you are on
Verizon and you call someone else on Verizon, it costs you nothing off
your peak cell minutes. This is free for peak and non-peak calls.
(Check with your own carry to see if they offer this feature). Soon
we'll be able to keep our cell numbers as we bounce from carrier to
carrier. Let's say your on Verizon, your friend used to be on Verizon,
she switched to Sprint and she was able to take her old cell phone
number with her. You still call the same number and think she is on
Verizon, so it's a free call, right? No, since she moved to Sprint. It
becomes a costly mistake at the end of the month when you get your
bill. What I'm trying to say is this; we adults get caught in the cell
company’s confusion trap too. It might not completely be your child’s
fault for bringing home a cell bill with high scores on it, instead of
their report card.
Find out more of what it's all about: www.robertlett.com/whatisit5.htm
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