Dealing with teenagers requires us to be always on the move. We have to be flexible, creative, and most of all constantly focused on the main goal: it’s the only way to help them. And you need to know your children’s World. This is the reason why I used Clash of Clans to start a relationship with a teenager, and I explain how you can do the same.
Clash of Clans: what’s in it for your children? The new golden attraction.
Clash of Clans is the most popular strategic video game among kids.
Here you manage a Middle Age fantasy village from its beginning to its ultimate glory.You start very low with some buildings:
- golden mines, elixir
extractors - troops: archers, barbarians
- defenses: cannons, archer towers
From that moment on your goal is to make your village to expand by making war against other players or by building a clan (with many players in it) and declaring war to other clans. The more you win, the more gold and elixir you gain, the more resources you are able to spend to update your buildings and expand your village.
This is not a novelty in the strategic video games apps: we have to look at the side-features if we want to understand what makes the difference to your kids. Ask your kid to explain to you how Clash of Clans works and why he or she is excited about this game. I did the same with my 14-years-old son and I’m glad to share my experience with you.
What does make Clash of Clans so attractive and addictive to your children?
Many features make Clash of Clans so attractive to kids and teenagers:
- easy access and very low entry level
- fast learning curve
- you can reach the middle levels with real ease, but…
- …it needs more and more involvement as you go up
- colorful, villages seem alive
- each new level gives you new features, so it’s a never ending discovery
But the very feature that makes your children stick with the game is the social one.
We live in a Social World.
Clash of Clans has a very strong social feature. Players are allowed to chat in a global chat and a clan chat (restricted to your clan’s mates). So children meet new people, create clans with their close friends (i.e.: classmates), and they interact in the chat.
As you are going to read from my experience, the clan chat feature is the real game changer here, and it converts a usual strategic video game into a real social platform.
The scenario
The Social Worker introduces Alex as a 14 years old boy who spends lot of time on his smartphone. Too much time, the mother says. He’s reported to avoid school and social life but his online activity. They say he’s shy, and they find hard to communicate with him.
The first encounter
The day I meet Alex he holds his smartphone, and he keeps playing a game on it.
I keep a constant look at him when we all (the Social Worker, the mother, me) try to involve the boy in the “Ivan is going to take care of you for a while” event.
He replies by monosyllables and grunts, while he keeps playing the same game: Clash of Clans.
I see it’s a formal event, and I know the boy won’t lower down his barriers: I need an informal meeting in order to establish a real connection with him.
The very encounter
The second meeting is at home, and I ask to be left alone with Alex. His mother forbade him to use his smartphone. While I’m talking with him I see he’s still too shy to talk.
I extract my smartphone, have a look at him, then I say “Oh, nothing important: it was just a notification from Clash of Clans”.
His eyes sparkle.
I ask him: “Do you know Clash of Clans?”
The story so far
It’s many months we meet in my office each week. We talk about his feelings, his desires, his fears. But the first 10 minutes of our sessions have the same opening: he asks me to let him have a look at my village, and eventually he makes some fixes to make it stronger. Sometimes I ask suggestions, too.
The key that opens the door
It may be a game, an application, a new social platform: while they are part of Life to your children, they are keys to you. Your kids were born in the Digital Age, a World where the Web is everywhere and it’s taken for granted. They don’t discern the Real Life from the Virtual Life for these are different nodes of the same System: the True Life. You can take it as a tactic advantage: you have more options to kick-start a conversation with your children.
Several steps and one ultimate goal
Your ultimate goal is to establish a rich relationship with your child.You accomplish it by following several sub-goals:
- find a channel that allows you to enter his/her World
- know more about that channel
- make that channel be your first common ground
- then you can expand your conversation
While you manage this process, please keep in mind the following principles:
- Real Life and Digital Life are the same for your children
- your children don’t merely play: they make significant experiences
- children like to feel helpful: don’t worry to ask them for informations and suggestions
- while you work this way, always remember to yourself the main goal
- be genuine! Don’t pretend you know everything of the app you are using, and don’t be worried to ask them to teach you
What if I don’t know what apps my kids are using?
Remember your kids don’t always tell you about their online activity.
This is why you may want to use a Parental Control Software, not to control: to monitor what your kids do online, use this information to kick-start useful conversations with your kids and feel connected.
After you have negotiated about the use of this software, and your kid is good with it, it’s very easy to say something like “I see you’re playing xxxx. It seems nice: can you explain me how it work?”.
(Original post from my Medium collection.)
Hello,
We have found similar content:
https://goodmenproject.com/featured-content/your-teen-is-passionate-about-clash-of-clans-heres-why-thats-great-for-you-dg/
https://www.digitalparentingtips.com/parenting-digital-age/
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Thank You.
More Info: Abuse Guide - 2017.
I’m sorry for the misunderstanding.
I’m the author of all the posts you listed.
Please check my introduction on Steemit here:
https://steemit.com/introduceyourself/@ivanpsy/a-digital-psychologist-lost-in-the-web-introducing-myself
From there you can check my social profiles and verify my identity.
You can also check my name and avatar on the posts you listed.
Please tell me if I still have to add these sources to this article.
Thank you Ivan.
We have added you to verified list.
I’m sorry @logic I’m new here.
You say that you added me to verified list: what does it mean?
Thank you!
We verified you as the author of https://twitter.com/IvanPsy
That you are the same person.
You have been scouted by @promo-mentors. We are always on the look out for promising authors.
I would like to invite you to our discord group https://discord.gg/vDPAFqb.
When you are there send me a message! (My Discord name is the same as the one here)
Thank you @futurethinker for your invitation! I just sent you a DM. I see you there!
Hey dude I was the one who recommended you to the promo mentor discord channel. I see the founder futurethinker already invite you. We have some doubts about your legimitacy because your posts were already posted in other sites, but I realized the author was always the same Ivan Ferrero, which I think is you right?
Hope to keep seeing you around.
Cheers!
Thank you very much @dedicatedguy for your endorsement!
I'm in the Discord channel as...IvanPsy... ;-)
Don't worry I'm the same person: I am a fan of repurposing my own content.
You can have a look at the channels listed in my introductory post:
https://steemit.com/introduceyourself/@ivanpsy/a-digital-psychologist-lost-in-the-web-introducing-myself
You can also have a look at:
https://medium.com/hacking-cyberbullying-and-digital-parenting-tips
https://medium.com/digital-bridges
If you talk Italian or can translate it:
https://www.bullismoonline.it , where I talk about Cyberbullying, my main field of work in Italy.
Some of my posts get translated into Spanish too, inside Planeta Chatbot medium publication, like this one:
https://planetachatbot.com/inmortalidad-existe-la-he-visto-y-su-sombra-es-un-chatbot-613e39bcdf11