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You are not imagining it: the hardest arguments in the house now happen over a device that fits in your child’s pocket. One moment it is their lifeline to homework and friends; the next it feels like a stranger has moved into your living room. This book steps into that tension and offers a way through.
Across clear chapters, it shows how to move beyond vague worries about digital parenting and towards specific habits that match your values. You will learn how to write a realistic family phone contract, set screen time boundaries that survive term-time and holidays, and use digital minimalism for families to calm the background noise without pretending you live in a cabin. Practical scripts help you respond to cyberbullying, group chat drama, and late-night scrolling with firmness and empathy.
Written for parents and carers of primary and secondary school children, it treats online safety for kids as part of everyday character formation, not a separate panic. You will find guidance on coaching parenting digital natives through location sharing, social media for teens, and the pull of dopamine and screens, while still protecting sleep, schoolwork, and friendships. Above all, this book is for families who want to raise emotionally intelligent young people who can carry sound judgment into any future app, not just obey rules while you are watching.

Phone, Friends, Freedom

SKU: 9789376553266
$24.99 Regular Price
$19.68Sale Price
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  • Samira Devane writes about the tangled meeting point between family life, technology, and emotion. Her work is rooted in the ordinary scenes that carry the biggest stakes: a child waiting for a reply that never comes, a parent staring at the typing dots in a group chat, siblings arguing over who controls the playlist. Samira is particularly interested in how households can move from fear-driven rules to everyday practices that build trust and judgment. She draws on years of listening to families describe their real digital dilemmas around kitchen tables, school gates, and late-night car rides home. A quiet thread in her writing is continuity: how today’s phones echo older worries about letters, diaries, and village gossip, even as the speed and scale change. In all her books, Samira aims to give readers language they can use the same day they read it, alongside a long-term vision of raising young people who can carry their values into any new technology, long after specific apps have disappeared.

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