E-Safety

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E-Safety • What are the risks posed to your child online? Sexting cyber bullying Grooming line gaming addiction

description

E-Safety. What are the risks posed to your child online?. Sexting. cyber bullying. Grooming. Online gaming addiction. E-safety Statistics. 91% of families in the UK have internet access UK children are more likely to access the Internet from laptops, TVs, mobile phones and games consoles - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of E-Safety

Page 1: E-Safety

E-Safety

• What are the risks posed to your child online?

Sexti ng cyber bullyingGrooming

Online gaming addiction

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E-safety Statistics

• 91% of families in the UK have internet access• UK children are more likely to access the Internet from

laptops, TVs, mobile phones and games consoles• 50% of teenagers use the Internet unsupervised • In 2011, half of all UK teenagers had a smartphone with

internet access• 70% of children aged 5-15 have a games console in their

bedroom, many of which are used for online gaming

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Teenage Internet use

1. School work (92% of teenagers in UK)2. Online gaming (83%)3. Watching videos on YouTube(75%)4. Social networks sites such as Facebook

(59% of 11-12 year olds)

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Sexting...what is it?

Sexting is when somebody uses their mobile to send an inappropriate text or image to other people

Group discussion…What can happen as a result of sending inappropriate photos or messages?

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Exposed

Group discussion…What can happen as a result of sending inappropriate photos or messages?

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The Risks of Sexting

• Bullying / harassment

• Lack of control of images

• Your ‘digital footprint’

• Future career / job issues

• Where the images might end up…

• The legal implications

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Protect yourself and your mates

You've got to always think before you send or share. Think how it would affect yourself and others …

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The Dangers of Sexting

Remember, photos you take and send can become public and

permanent. And the police may get involved

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Thinkuknow

There is always somewhere you can go for help and advice

www.thinkuknow.co.uk

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If things go a step too far, report directly to Click CEOP

www.clickceop.net