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What age to let kids have mp3 player
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28/02/2013, 09:44 PM
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Posts: 143
Joined: 13-January 10
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Be bold or italic. NEVER be regular!
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Mine had them by 3. We started with kid headphones that were volume limited. They mainly use them in the car on long trips but occaisionally just for a chillout! They now have our old iphone 3s (not as phones obviously) and the main issue is remembering to charge them
This post has been edited by Carabosse: 28/02/2013, 09:45 PM
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28/02/2013, 09:49 PM
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Posts: 429
Joined: 14-September 06
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Member
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DD got an iPod when she was about 2.5 due to fact that she was always stealing her older brothers to listen to and play with. She loved grooving around to the music.
So to answer your question, I don't think your daughter is too young. You could always get her an ipod mini to start with.
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28/02/2013, 09:56 PM
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Posts: 27
Joined: 20-February 13
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New Member
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My mum bought my DD an mp3 player (sony walkman) when she was about 12 months old. The one DD has has inbuilt speakers, so when we were going away on holidays, I could take her music that I play at bed time with us, and put the mp3 player next to her portacot. She is at the age now (about 2 and a half) where I would be happy to let her use volume limited headphones (not the ear plug ones) for a short amount of time.
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01/03/2013, 06:12 AM
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Posts: 12,988
Joined: 9-May 03
From: Newcastle, NSW, Australia
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Julie
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You can get the volume limited kids headphones from heaps of places ... Got my girls ones from big w, lovely bright pink and bright blue, volume limited. Think they were moshi brand
As for age, my oldest got an MP3 player at age 10. Dd2 got hers at the same time age 8.
Before that, they had access to the CD player and would dance and listen to music that way. Dd1 was never really fussed to have an mp 3 player at all.
Then a year later I upgraded the older two girls to an iPod touch. Dd2 had been asking, so I decided to let them. Dd3 is 6 and she inherited the MP3 player. I didn't want to give her unrestricted access to an iPod as she isn't good at self moderating, and still so young. My concern wasn't the music though, it was the eyesight issue. When they are still so young, having unlimited access to an iPod with the small screen and games, I was concerned about damage to her eyesight. Which I got from the ophthalmologist who is seeing a huge increase in eyesight issue in young kids lately and suspects a link to the increase in very young kids spending a lot of time with small screened electronic devises.
This post has been edited by Julie3Girls: 01/03/2013, 06:20 AM
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