Playing safe

41

description

Invited presentation to the parent-teacher association of C.E.I.P. Rosa Luxemburgo, Madrid, April 2012. http://www.educa.madrid.org/web/cp.rosaluxemburgo.madrid/index.html

Transcript of Playing safe

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Overview

What are the key issues of concern?

'Internet addiction' Unmonitored access to content 'Stranger Danger' Cyberbullying

How do we tackle these concerns?

Parental control software Talking with our children Plain common sense

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Getting real ...

New technologies have always been perceived as a potential danger

Television in the 1950s / 1960s Music (radio and disc … lyrics, 'subliminal

messages', ...) Computer games (1980s on)

… though as a “corrupting influence” So what is different about the Internet?

"Children don't go online--they are online. It's part of their everyday lives"

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"Children don't GO online--they ARE online"

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Too much of a good thing ...

How many hours a day does your child spend online?

Are you aware of / have you heard of 'Internet addiction'?

Does your child have an active real-world social life?

Do you place time restrictions on your child's Internet usage?

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Internet addiction

“Robert Kraut, a psychologist at Carnegie Mellon University, led a team who studied people 'before and after' they used the Internet. They found that greater use of the Internet was associated with declines in participants' communication with household family members, declines in the size of their social circle, and increases in their depression and loneliness”

(Blascovich and Bailenson, Infinite Reality, 2011)

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Internet addiction

“Do you/they:

Spend hours online without a break?

Prefer to spend time on a computer over friends and family?

Lie about the amount of time spent online?

Hide what is done online?

Check e-mail several times an hour?

Hear family complaints about the amount of time spent online? … (cont'd ...)

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Internet addiction

“Do you/they:

Constantly think about being online—even when offline?

Log on while at work or school instead of working or studying?

If the answer to even a couple of these questions is 'yes', you may have an addiction problem”.

(Blascovich and Bailenson, Infinite Reality, 2011)

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“Where do you want to go today?”

What web sites is your child viewing? Do you supervise / monitor your child's internet

usage? Have you spoken with your child about

“inappropriate content”?

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What is your child viewing?

If you think your child has been viewing inappropriate content, report it to your ISP or to the content provider

Look for “Report this picture” and similar buttons on web sites

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Connecting with others

The Internet of the 2000s is inherently social … Email Facebook Instant Messengers (Yahoo, MSN, AIM, …) MySpace Twitter Virtual worlds (Panfu, Club Penguin, Oloko,

SmallWorlds, …, etc)

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'Stranger Danger'

"Talking to your child is the simplest and best way to keep up. After all who knows better what your children are up to online … other than your children!"

What does your child do on the Internet? What web sites does he/she visit? Who does he/she chat with? And where? Who are your children's online friends?

Ask him/her! (just as you would for real-world activities)

Apply the same cautions as you would in the offline world: “Don't talk to strangers!”

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What is a 'friend'?

“What does a friend mean to you? And is that the same as what it means to your child?” 'Friends' they've met in chat rooms or gaming sites,

whom they have never met in real life Ease of adding new 'friends' … and the naturalness

for your child of accepting a friend request Gives access to your (child's) personal information:

what you look like, what you like, where you are, who else you know, … But how do you know whom you can trust? What is a 'friend'?

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Facebook friends

“Remember: the people you share with can always share your information with others”.

Privacy is a collective responsibility!

Do you know who your child's friends are?

Does your child know who his/her friends are?!?!

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Facebook privacy settings

"Remember: we act differently online to how we do in the real world.

It can be much easier to say, do, or reveal things online when we're hiding behind a computer."

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Facebook privacy settings

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“I know where you live”

What information is your child sharing online? Personal details? (school, home location, ...) Photographs? Videos?

It's important that your children learn to think before they share. Once your content is online, you can lose control of it.

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Social gaming and virtual worlds

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How many worlds are there?

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Children are largest user group

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Habbo Hotel

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Stardoll

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Moshi Monsters

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Bin Weevils

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SmallWorlds

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Chimpoo

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Users by age group

70.3% of all virtual world users are (Q1, 2011) between the ages of 5 and 15; and an extraordinary 84% between the ages of 8 and 20

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Virtual worlds and social gaming

Do you monitor how much time your child spends online?

Do you know which social gaming worlds your child is using?

Do you know who your child's in-world friends are?

Have you talked with your child about personal safety when in a social gaming world?

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Parental control systems

Parental control systems for computer, Xbox, Playstation, and Wii

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Cyberbullying

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Cyberbullying

In the south USA, one in 5 children aged 10 to 18 has reported being a victim of cyberbullying.

Has your child been bullied? Don't wait till it happens—caution your child now!

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Cyberbullying … online support

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Other online support

The Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre at:

http://ceop.police.uk

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Other online support

CEOP atThinkYouKnow.co.uk

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Other online support

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Summing up ...

Create a computer account for your child separate from your own, and (with younger children) ensure that only you know the password. Time-restrict usage.

If using MS Windows, install anti-virus software. Talk with your child sensitively about the dangers of talking

with strangers on the 'net. Ensure they know how to restrict publishing of, and access to, personal information.

Talk with your child about 'inappropriate content'. If there's something you'd not want them to view on TV, then you'd not want them to view it on the 'net!

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Summing up ...

Set limits on the amount of time your child spends online

Make sure your child takes regular screen breaks (at least 15 minutes in every hour)

Ensure your child thinks before sharing pictures or videos; and explain why they should not give out personal information such as mobile phone number or address

(cont'd ...)

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Summing up … (2)

Make sure your child knows to come to you if they are concerned about anything that happens online

Parental control tools are helpful, but should never be seen as a substitute for personal engagement with your child

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Some useful links

Keeping children safe online

http://www.direct.gov.uk/en/parents/yourchildshealthandsafety/internetsafety/dg_071138

Child internet safety

http://www.mumsnet.com/internet-safety UK Council for Child Internet Safety

http://www.education.gov.uk/ukccis Child safety online: a guide for parents

http://www.guardian.co.uk/mcafee/child-safety-online