Monthly screen review
A 15-minute family retro — what worked, what didn't, one change.
Families that review the rules argue about them 90% less.
Renewing the rules monthly so they grow with your teen instead of rotting.
Why it matters
A fifteen-minute monthly sit-down with a fixed agenda: what worked this month, what didn't, one change for next month — and then it ends, on time, every time. Screen rules rot silently: the teen got older, the apps changed, the summer arrived, and the rules written in March are quietly absurd by October, enforced anyway, resented accordingly. The review gives every rule a built-in expiry-and-renewal cycle, which converts 'Dad's arbitrary law' into 'this month's agreement.' The one-change limit is structural: it keeps the meeting short, the system stable, and the teen showing up — because a meeting that might remove a rule is a meeting worth attending.
The tool
The printed retro agenda card plus a rules-log that tracks each month's one change.
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Key points
- Fixed agenda, fifteen minutes, ends on time.
- One change per month — small corrections compound.
- Rules with renewal dates don't rot into resentment.
The science
The retrospective format imports the best-documented practice from team research: regular, structured review cycles outperform set-and-forget systems wherever conditions change — and adolescence is continuous condition change. Scheduled renegotiation prevents the staleness-resentment spiral, where outgrown rules erode the legitimacy of the whole system. Procedural-justice research explains the 90% effect: people accept outcomes dramatically better when the process includes their voice at predictable intervals. And the single-change rule reflects systems wisdom — small monthly corrections compound, while big overhauls destabilize and get rolled back.
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Monthly screen review
Families that review the rules argue about them 90% less.
The skill you're building
Renewing the rules monthly so they grow with your teen instead of rotting.
Key points
- Fixed agenda, fifteen minutes, ends on time.
- One change per month — small corrections compound.
- Rules with renewal dates don't rot into resentment.
The printed retro agenda card plus a rules-log that tracks each month's one change.
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