Culture Dad's trick to help son improve grades divides TikTok: 'I was disappointed not seeing something supportive'


A father who was fed up with his son’s academic performance came up with an idea to improve his grades, in a TikTok that has since sparked a debate.

On Feb. 14, user @letzgofishing shared his plan on the social media platform, recording himself building a box out of wood.

“My son showed me his report card,” the user wrote in a text overlay. “His math grade is starting to decline. He wants to be a [‘YouTuber’], so he spends a good amount of time playing video games.”

As the father attaches a couple of metal latches to the box, his strategy to improve his son’s grades slowly comes into the picture.

“I decided to help motivate him get his grades up,” he wrote, showing the final result: a box with his son’s video games locked inside. A whiteboard sits atop the box with a number of equations that, when solved, unlock the combination to the makeshift safe.

The father’s plan has since received over 4.4 million views and divided TikTok users, some of whom criticized him for not coming up with a more encouraging way to help his son.

“Ahh yes my kids grade is slipping so instead of asking him if he’s been stressed lately and helping him, I lock away the things he loves,” one person commented sarcastically.

“I was disappointed not seeing something supportive,” a second simply posted in response.

Others, however, defended the father for coming up with what they presumably thought was a creative idea.

“People are soft now,” one person wrote. “I think this is great. Electronics are privileges. If you’re not meeting expectations, you have consequences.”

“Good job!!” another added. “You did what needed to be done!!”

It’s unclear whether the father’s son has gotten his math grade up since, but one thing’s for sure: he probably won’t be playing video games anytime soon until he does.
 
"Locking away something he loves!"

It's video games, not a kitten or a girl friend.

When are these fuckers going to remember that electronics are luxuries, not necessities?
This.
Anytime news like this comes up faggy millenials come out of the woodwork to shriek about how abusive, stigmatizing, etc taking bing bing wahoos away from children is. I wonder if these cunts have nightmares about the time their parents grounded them and took away their consoles and if they piss the bed everytime.
Why is discipline such an alien concept to these people?
 
Can't you just play games off of steam nowadays? It's not like locking up his physical games are going to make a difference.

And since kids "need" their computers to study, he can't just take away the kid's computer. I see high IQ's run in the gene pool.
Dick, obviously no high IQ here either, you can't even read.
'a box with his son’s video games locked inside.'

Why the fuck would I reward a kid for failing? Have these tardlets unlearned the word "distraction"?
They don't understand what distraction actually is any longer. Thanks to social media, they are permanently distracted, that's why they call it 'ADHD-like symptoms', which it is not anything like.
 
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“Ahh yes my kids grade is slipping so instead of asking him if he’s been stressed lately and helping him, I lock away the things he loves,” one person commented sarcastically.

tbh i sort of agree with this
you're the parent, why aren't you asking what is going on? why aren't you sitting down and helping your kid with his homework. be a parent and help them out
and if they refuse to do their work, then you just take their stuff away
 
This.
Anytime news like this comes up faggy millenials come out of the woodwork to shriek about how abusive, stigmatizing, etc taking bing bing wahoos away from children is. I wonder if these cunts have nightmares about the time their parents grounded them and took away their consoles and if they piss the bed everytime.
Why is discipline such an alien concept to these people?
Benjamin Spock was the one who pioneered the whole "let your kids be feral little shits because they're expressing themselves" mentality.

This dad is doing nothing wrong. Parents who try to be their kid's friend, instead of their parent, don't truly love their kids. To love them is to will what is best for them.
 
Hey, if it doesn't improve his math skills, it'll definitely improve his lockpicking skills.
If the father is a reasonable human being the next step then would be hoping the kid can create electronics from sand and crude oil because the video games would be turned to dust.
 
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This reminds me of that incident where they would lock an octopus's food in a series of boxes and essentially force it to pick the locks if it wanted to eat. This situation ended in the octopus ramming its entire body through a small hole in the corner of the box and refusing to come out until the aquarium staff picked the lock themselves and opened it up.

Inb4 this kid installs a lock on the door to his room and puts up a set of even more complicated math equations so his dad can't get at his vidya.
 
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