Just 15 Percent of Parents With Preteens Would Let Them Trick-or-Treat Alone
A new study shows the pervasiveness of helicopter parenting.

They just can't let go. Parents want to give their kids more independence, but can't bring themselves to do it.
That's the conclusion of a new study from the University of Michigan C.S. Mott Children's Hospital. While parents believe it's crucial for elementary school kids to do things "away from direct adult supervision," there is "a sizable gap between parent attitudes and actions," the study found.
How sizable? Less than 25 percent of parents will let their kids, ages five to eight, prepare their own snacks. Only half the parents of kids ages nine to 11 were willing to let their children go fetch an item from another aisle at the store. The majority of those same parents were also unwilling to let them walk to a friend's home, or play in the park with one. Just 15 percent would let their kids trick or treat without adult supervision.
These results suggest that parents may be unintentionally depriving their kids of the "experience and confidence" necessary to become functioning adults. Parents seem aware of this, the study found. But they are just too afraid to loosen their grip.
The top parental fear is—no surprise—safety. The parents of the 9-to-11-year-olds "worry someone might scare or follow their child." However, only 17 percent actually felt they live in an unsafe neighborhood. Parents also worry that their child isn't ready to do things on their own, or doesn't want to. But then there's the fear of being judged as bad parents, or having the cops called on them.
The upshot is that unless something changes, this generation of parents is stuck; they're regretful that they're helicoptering but unable to stop.
As many Reason readers know, this is precisely why I co-founded Let Grow about five years ago—along with Dan Shuchman, the longtime chairman of the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, Peter Gray, a professor who studies . Our mission is to make it easy, normal, and legal for parents to give kids more independence.
Aside from helping to pass "Childhood Independence" bills in eight states, we are also working to loosen the helicopter parenting death grip that exists throughout schools. We call it the Let Grow Experience. The centerpiece of the experience is a homework assignment teachers can give students once a month that says: "Go home and do something new, on your own, with your parents' permission—but without your parents."
That little push from the school makes it easier to let go. And when all the kids in a school are doing "Let Grow Projects" like walking the dog, running errands, or getting themselves to school, parents have the added comfort of knowing everyone else is letting go, too. That makes it normal.
American parents don't mean to be undermining their kids. But thanks to inflated fears and stifling norms, that's what, accidentally and collectively, we are doing. It's never too late to stop.
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Just 15 percent would let their kids trick or treat without adult supervision.
I would've stuck with the "half the parents of kids ages nine to 11 were willing to let their children go fetch an item from another aisle at the store".
I don't know the average age nor the general neighborhood or other life situations of the 85% who wouldn't let them trick or treat without supervision, but if you wouldn't let your 9-11 yr. old go to the next aisle in the store to pick something out, you're either hyperparanoid or the 9-11 yr. old shouldn't be in the store in the first place.
you’re either hyperparanoid or the 9-11 yr. old shouldn’t be in the store in the first place.
Either that or you've got a major, and I do mean major pedophile problem.
You've got a major panic problem. When children are abused or exploited, they're almost always victimized by someone they know: relatives, family friends, or authority figures such as teachers, coaches or clergy. Random grocery shoppers should be right at the bottom of the list of things to worry about.
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>>Just 15 percent would let their kids trick or treat without adult supervision.
neither of my parents ever trick-or-treated with me ... but for anecdata in the Mr. Mom Halloween scene from 40 years ago the entire neighborhood's adult set seemed costumed and out with the kids ... then in Halloween 5 (1989) no adults were out with the kids but hey if a masked homicidal maniac was running around town I wouldn't have been out either
In Seattle last night, that was 0%.
Right?
I'd love to see Lenore defend her school assignment when it's "Go home and do something new, on your own, with your parents' permission—but without your parents - on the streets of Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, Chicago, New York, Baltimore, Detroit, Minneapolis, Atlanta, Washington DC, etc."
While each of those does have dangerous areas, many other parts are perfectly safe. But some people are absolutely determined to keep their panties in a bunch, and we have the 24/7 news cycle to make sure their panic remains at full boil. You're very much part of the problem.
These perfectly safe parts, are they clearly marked? Or do you just kind of have to cross your fingers and hope you're in one of them?
Also, what qualities do the alleged perfectly safe parts have/not have that distinguish them from the unsafe parts?
The parents want to go so they can empty out the candy bowls left on the porch.
The Boy Scout motto is "Be Prepared". You can't keep your kids from danger, but you can prepare them to deal with it, if it comes.
Boy Scouts often carried knives in my day.
Of course, back then, it was all boys.
If you had checked the pockets of the boys in my elementary school in the 1960s, you would have found a pen knife on almost every boy.
We live in a suburban development with probably 300 homes within reasonable walking distance from our house. We had eight trick or treaters this year. Eight. and most of the houses on our cul de sac had decorations out and everything. We had more during Covid.
We normally use up three or even four of those big bags of candy giving only a couple pieces unless the costume is very adorable. This year we still have one bag left. The numbers were definitely down. Plenty of houses were giving out candy, just fewer kids out and about.
I wonder if all the stories in the news about how expensive candy is this year made the parents think there wouldn't be much trick or treating.
Why would they, now that large swaths of Americans are openly defending drug legalization and its resulting addiction and abuse, consequence-free crime, normalization/encouragement of sexual deviancy, and open hostility towards non-minority demographics?
When you create an amoral or immoral libertine society in which a people's sense of community is utterly destroyed, then they can no longer trust said "community" to help keep their children safe.
Just like you won't trust someone who betrays your confidence and breaks their promises, the same is true for a society that has violated its social contract. Individuals - parents, in this case - no longer trust them.
You literally just wrote about this in the article prior to this one. Homeschooling has shot up at a meteoric rate. Why? Because parents no longer trust schools/teachers/boards not to be creepy indoctrination factories that, when they're not browbeating them into self-loathing via CRT/3WF, are grooming them to be served up to the LGBT. Often in secret and intentionally concealed from parents.
When you worship/glorify drug use, sexual deviancy, crime, and hatred - surprise, normal people stop trusting you. Especially with their kids.
The moral panic bullshit remains strong with this one.
Perhaps. But the question is why parents don't entrust their children to schools and city streets. I simply provided the answer.
The school and cities - from their leadership to their employees - have made it abundantly clear they're not to be trusted.
I say this as a friend and with all the love in the world. Many of the decafinated brands have the same full flavor you've come to expect from your regular coffee.
Eh, I wouldn't let a preteen trick or treat in their own either. Not because I'm worried someone will kidnap them if they wander in a big group, but more because I'm worried that they'd do something stupid like run out in front of a car while distracted by sugar in the dark.
13 seems a good age to start trusting them to be able to gps their way home if they get lost, as long as they are out with friends.
Yeah, I'd have to agree. My grandson who is 10 and my granddaughter who is 4 are great examples of zero impulse control when it comes to sugar. I'm not sure but I don't think children develop the needed depth perception and motion awareness to realize a car is coming at them until at least 10 or 11. But I may be wrong.
Of course we also went along with them because we wanted to show off our own costumes. I made a full suit of studded leather armor with some nice tooling work. Like I was going to sit around giving out candy in that outfit.
But then there's the fear of being judged as bad parents, or having the cops called on them.
I don't know about where Lenore lives, but around here parents can be criminally prosecuted for letting children under 13 out of their sight. A lot of helicopter parents don't want to be hovering all the time, but they play the part so their kids don't get taken away and put into foster care.
Colorado was real bad for things like that. The cops loved to take white kids away from parents and drop them in the foster care system.
Didn't they arrest a mother for letting her kids walk to a park in broad daylight ? No thanks.