What Teens Lose When They Can Always Be Found

The tyranny of Life360 and Snap Maps

Laila McClay
OneZero

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Credit: Peter Dazeley/Getty Images

“My parents have always advocated a Darwin-style parenting approach; only the smart kids will survive.”

That was one of my high school students’ explanation for why her family is in the minority when it comes to parents using location tracking tools for their children via any number of smartphone applications, from the simplicity of sharing locations in Google Maps to more complex applications like Life360.

I’m a teacher and a mom of a teenager, and I realize that there are many perfectly rational reasons why we parents would want to track our kids’ location. Most of these revolve around obvious things like safety, driving, emergencies, natural disasters, and bad people who do bad things. But some of our reasons may be more about us and less about them; more about trying to quell that ever-present anxiety about our children’s well-being that starts, as I recall, somewhere around conception, and ends, I am assuming, sometime around never.

This topic of parental surveillance came up as we were discussing Rebecca Solnit’s A Field Guide to Getting Lost, which I assign to my ninth grade Humanities classes every year. Our guiding curricular question for this course investigates the ways that geography shapes culture. So Solnit’s…

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