...Kids need a bit of freedom, if they are always watched they will grow up expecting there to be someone else responsible for them at all times and not be willing to take responsibilty for themselves.
.. think it's called a walking bus or something like that
I have three in primary school (5, 7 & 8). They get the bus in and out, but on a Friday we let the 7 & 8 year old walk home. There are about eight roads, mostly estates but also shop (where they pop in to spend a euro) and petrol station - one lollipop lady and one set of pedestrian lights en route. It takes them about half an hour. Kids have to learn to do stuff and get about but it's often hard to give them freedom for fear for their safety.I have a 7 year old. He's a smart cookie, attentive, knows how to cross the road. The school is only around the corner and there is a lollipop lady at the main road.....BUT I would NEVER let him do it on his own!!
Like a Walking Bus?Maybe if there was a system in place where parents would volunteer their time to walk a bunch of kids to school in the mornings - one parent could do monday morning and another another day etc - it would cut down on alot of traffic in the mornings
Personally I wouldn't let my children walk to school on their own at 7. And my parents would have a heart attack if I did. Yet when I was 7 I was walking to school - in fact I started walking at 5 years. (and we lived a mile from the school and when I was 5 I had to go across a wooded area to get to the road home) Probably underlines how things have changed.
A lot depends on the child too - how street wise they are (I wasn't by the way).
further to my earlier post and since this thread started my parents have discovered my 12 year old walks to school and absolutely freaked!!
The school is 1 kilometre away - i agree with everything you say.how far are you from the school itself? the whole issue of parents driving their children to schools very nearby just increases the traffic jams in this country leading to longer rush-hours and is helping to lead to severe childhood obesity levels, whatever about walking your kids to school driving kids to schools around the corner just doesn't make sense.
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