We naturally want to protect our children from online dangers and inappropriate content. Parental control apps and features are often touted as the solution, allowing us to filter content, limit screen time, and monitor our kids' online activities. However, while these tools can play a role in online safety, relying on parental control apps alone are not enough to truly keep children safe online. Let’s take a deeper look at why “bolted-on” parental controls fall short, and what a more comprehensive approach to protecting our children should include.
Parental controls can be useful, but they've got some serious technical and social limitations, making them insufficient as a standalone solution:
Rather than relying solely on technological solutions, a more effective approach to online safety involves:
We asked one of our child expert advisors, Rachel Ruiz, what advice she would give parents who are trying to take a more proactive role in monitoring their children’s online activities. Here’s what she had to say. Most parents feel safer when they’re constantly monitoring their child’s device, but you risk your instructions becoming background noise by overdoing it.
Think of it as a quality over quantity approach. It’s better to have fewer, but more in-depth conversations about digital safety that stick with kids and encourage them to be in charge of their internet use and their safety.
For a younger child, check in at the end of each device use and have simple, predictable questions such as: “Did you learn anything interesting online today? Did anything make you laugh or smile? Did anything make you feel upset or uncomfortable? Did you see or experience anything you want to talk to me about?”
For an older child, check in at the end of each week of device use and ask reflective, open-ended questions like: “How well did you balance device use with other activities this week? If anything made you uncomfortable, how did you handle it?”
Regular check-ins are a great time to bring up your concerns. For a younger child, you can use it as a “teachable moment.” With an older child, try asking them to come up with solutions or ways to resolve a concern first before you give suggestions.
While parents play a crucial role, we shouldn't shoulder the entire burden of keeping kids safe online. Tech companies and policymakers also have important responsibilities:
The bottom line is: It's time to move beyond just restricting and surveilling. Parental controls can be an important tool in our digital parenting toolbox, but they're not the entire solution. By taking a more holistic approach that emphasizes education, communication, and gradual independence — and by leveraging kids-first solutions like Angel Kids — we can better equip our children to harness technology's benefits while skillfully managing its risks.
The Angel Kids Team
A member of Angel Kids' advisory board, Rachel Ruiz is an adolescent mental health expert with over a decade of experience working with teens and families. As a licensed clinical social worker, Rachel specializes in helping young people navigate the challenges of adolescence, using evidence-based approaches grounded in developmental psychology, attachment theory, and neurobiology to empower and guide them towards long-term well-being.