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Parents use Facebook and send 600 texts a year monitoring their children. By Daily Mail Reporter Updated: 14:07 GMT, 30 May 2011 A typical family spends less than two and a half hours together a week10% of parents have been forced to get a second job, due to the economic downturn The average parent sends 600 texts a year to monitor and 'connect' with their children, a study has revealed. In addition, worried mothers and fathers on average write 312 emails each and spend 28 hours on the phone every year - keeping track of their young ones. The research, which was carried out through interviews with 5,000 parents, revealed the extraordinary lengths modern parents have to go to to keep an eye on their off-spring. Enlarge In touch: Parents regularly check on children using emails and texts - 20 per cent claim they stand a better chance of talking to their child via technology As well as regular emails, parents also bombard children with texts and phone calls in a bid for family time, according to the study by National Family Week.

Parents using email and mobiles to track their children. Parents send 600 texts, 312 emails and make 28 hours of phone calls a year to their kids. 600 Texts, 312 Emails: How Parents Keep Track Of Their Children. A study carried out for National Family Week found that parents needed to send at least 600 texts, 312 emails and spend more than 1500 minutes on the phone every year to keep track of where their children are. The report found that 20 per cent of parents thought that social networking websites like Facebook were the best place to find out what their sons and daughters were doing.

The downside though, according to the parents that were polled (around 5000 in all), is that family life seems to have suffered, although most of them said that it was "just a consequence of modern life". More than half of those surveyed said that mobile phones and online networking "overly preoccupied" their children, while a sixth of the respondents said that they think texting was the most serious culprit when it came to technology negatively impacting family life. In addition more than a third banned mobile phones and laptops at the dinner table.

Parents send 600 texts and use Facebook to keep tabs on offspring. A new study commissioned by National Family Week has revealed the amount of technological effort parents expend keeping track of their children. Apparently an average parent sends 600 texts a year in an effort to find out just where little Johnny (or Jane) is, as technology increasingly becomes the method they use to stay in touch. The research also pointed to 312 emails per year and usage of sites such as Facebook.

One in five parents said the best chance they had of getting hold of their child was via such technological means. While mobiles and suchlike help to keep tabs on the kids and are useful for emergencies, just over 40% of parents lamented the fact that when they do try and get the family together, it can be a difficult task despite these aids. And instead of talking to each other when they are together, the family might all be texting friends or surfing YouTube on their mobiles.

Social sites are best place to track children, say parents. Parents Use Texts, Emails and Facebook to Keep Eye on Kids. In this technological age parents still want to keep an eye on what their children are up to, and although most keep in contact via a mobile phone, a recent survey has shown how parents use technology to keep tabs on their kids.

With many kids carrying a smartphone of some description be it an iPhone, BlackBerry, Android device or other, parents according to an article over on Tech Watch, sends on average 600 texts per year so they can find out what their child is up to. Apparently the survey also showed that parents have turned to sending in the region of 312 emails per year to keep track of their offspring, and also make use of social networking sites such as Facebook. According to the research one-in-five parents say that the best chance of contacting their children is by using technology of some description, although 48 percent of parents surveyed say that when they try to get the family together via technology it can be somewhat difficult.

Parents use Facebook to keep tabs on their children - Mums & Dads. 600 texts to keep track of children. Parents use Facebook and send 600 texts a year to keep track of children. Britain’s parents are turning to technology to keep a track of their kids and try to maintain family connections. According to a recent National Family Week (NFW) survey of 5,000 mums and dads, the average parent sends 600 text messages and 312 emails per year in an effort to ensure their children are safe. The statistics show that a fifth of parents believe they stand a better chance of talking to their kids through technology, despite the fact that 17 per cent say mobile phones impact upon cherished family time. This is perhaps why almost two-fifths (39 per cent) of parents have a rule that no phones or gadgets are allowed at the table during dinner. One worrying statistic highlighted in the research was that the average family typically spends less than two-and-a-half hours together per week.

NFW spokesman Nick Henry explained that it is ‘inevitable’ that kids will get preoccupied with technology and ‘natural’ that their social habits change as they age. Parents Send 600 Texts, 312 Emails and Spend 28 Hours on the Phone Each Year Keeping Track of Children. It’s Friday night – do you know where your children are? No, this is not the slogan for a new horror movie that’s being released soon, but a question that has spawned parents to use texts, emails and phone calls to find out where their children are. Lots of them. A survey of more than 5,000 parents conducted by National Family Week recently found that they send 600 texts per year in an effort to monitor and keep track of their kids. According to the Daily Mail, these parents also send an average of 312 emails and make 28 hours worth of phone calls trying to connect with their kids. It may be a lot harder for kids now to lie about their whereabouts. In addition to trying to track the whereabouts of their kids, these parents are also taking advantage of how plugged in their kids are to try and schedule more quality family time together via mobile devices.

The Daily Mail quotes Nick Henry of National Family Week who commissioned the report as stating: Parents use Facebook and send 600 texts a year monitoring their children « Nipper News. Parents rely more on technology to keep track on children. BBC Asian Network Programmes - Nihal, 30/05/2011. Keeping track of the kids | Parent Pages new website. Keeping track of the kids Posted on 31 May 2011. Tags: Family, Just for Dads Parents use Facebook and send 600 texts a year monitoring their children By Daily Mail Reporter Last updated at 3:07 PM on 30th May 2011 * A typical family spends less than two and a half hours together a week * 10% of parents have been forced to get a second job, due to the economic downturn The average parent sends 600 texts a year to monitor and ‘connect’ with their children, a study has revealed.

In addition, worried mothers and fathers on average write 312 emails each and spend 28 hours on the phone every year – keeping track of their young ones. Source: DAILYMAIL. How many times do you text your child in one day? | Mobile News. It would appear that parents are bombarding their children with texts and emails to try and track them down. A survey conducted by the National Family Week shows that on average parents will send 600 texts and 312 emails a year to keep track of the children. 5000 parents were interviewed for this survey to find out how technology affects family life. Twenty percent of parents said the best way to find out what their child is up to is on social networking sites, such as Facebook. Seventy-five percent agreed that technology has had a negative effect on their family life with a third having to ban mobile phones and other devices at the dinner table.

The spokesman for National Family Week commented: “Having to contact your children and immediate family through texts, emails and social networking sites to track them down is just a consequence of modern life.” And that said, 20 years ago it would have being a lot harder to know what your family was doing throughout the day. Mozilla Firefox. Jpriestley May 31st, 2011 Welcome back to our weekly instalment of what’s hot in the world of social media. In case you missed what happened over the past week, here’s a run-down of our top six: 1. A new study commissioned by National Family Week has revealed the amount of technological effort parents expend keeping track of their children. Apparently an average parent sends 600 texts a year in an effort to find out just where their children are and also uses Facebook to try to track them down. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.

BGN Entrepreneur » Parents Use Facebook to Keep Track of Children. How Are You Spending Your Time? Parenting 1 - 2 of 2 prevnext Latest features 1 - 6 of 6 Don't miss 1 - 1 of 10 Latest from our bloggers 1DIY family Easter crafts: Spring wreath and pretty eggsTue, Apr 8, 2014 15:01 BSTEaster time is family time. Follow Yahoo Lifestyle Watch now 1 - 1 of 8 Most popular More most popular » Quick bites 1 - 1 of 5. Parents send 600 texts and spend 28 hours on the phone keeping track of the kids. Reputation.com. Parents use social networks 'to find children's whereabouts' | uSwitch.com News.

How has technology affected your family’s life? | The TalkTalk Blog. To keep an eye on kids, parents use Facebook & texting « Best Phone Deals – Latest Mobile Phone News. Facebook is best way to track children | HathNews.Com. Parents Keeping Tabs On Their Children More Than Expected. A recent survey found parents were contacting their children via email and text at a much greater rate than previously thought. The average is three times a day.

When asked, parents told researchers that the best place to see what their children were doing was to use social networking sites such as Facebook. Parents were also found to send around 312 emails and 600 text messages every year. Speaking with the Daily Telegraph, Nick Henry of National Family Week who carried out the survey on 5,000 parents said: “Having to contact your children and immediate family through texts, emails and social networking sites to track them down is just a consequence of modern life.” He added: “It could be argued that 20 years ago it would be harder to keep track of the family throughout the day as so few of us were contactable like we are now.” While on the one hand these findings clearly show that parents care about what their offspring are getting up to, and that they are safe.