L.T. GREER

Introduction

When I got my driver’s license, my dad scratched out a hand-written contract (of sorts) that outlined what I committed to doing and not doing behind the wheel.

Writing and adapting ideas from several sources,* I put together the same kind of thing for my kids, but this time for navigating the wonder and gravity of the technology that they are confronted with all the time.

Like the driving agreement, the real power of this is not as a “contract,” but as a spark for good conversation about being purposeful with work and play in a screen-saturated age.

Below you’ll see the contract, and here is a downloadable .pdf version.


Our family chooses to be tech-wise

Prelude

I, __________, understand that devices like phones, iPads, and computers are privileges. And, along with my parents, I commit to establishing structured limits: in quantity, frequency, and moral character.

Content

Devices and the Internet are tools for learning and entertainment

Communication

Devices and the Internet are tools to communicate

Clock

Devices and the Internet are tools for work and play

Postlude

My parents — and God, who is my heavenly parent — love me so much that there’s nothing that I can do online or offline to make them love me more or to make them love me less. This is so incredible that sometimes it’s hard to understand or believe! But it’s true.

This kind of love means that our family looks out for and wants the best for one another.


*Rule of Life, The Tech-Wise Family, Ourpact and Covenant Eyes. I chose not to put things in quotation marks because it made for a less distracting document to talk through with my kids. But I want to acknowledge that a few lines are copied almost verbatim from Rule of Life and Ourpact. Covenant Eyes gave me the idea for “content, communication, and clock.” The Tech-Wise Family by Andy Crouch provided the overall inspiration, although nothing is quoted directly from it (unless it was unintentional).