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Safety in cyberspace: taking an active
role in your junior high schooler's online life
As if helping navigate your children through the daily ups
and downs of the junior high years wasn’t confusing
enough, now you have to grapple with how to help your
pre-teens and teens safely through a whole new realm—the virtual
world of the Internet.
The Internet has been a true innovation for kids—here
they can socialize via instant messaging, post their own
web pages, access information and talk with people from
all walks of life. But it has also opened up a world of
potential threats. Keeping your children safe from those
things you know they are not emotionally or intellectually
ready to handle can be a challenge, especially at an age
when they naturally want more freedom to explore new ideas
and relationships.
Here are some of the online hazards children may come
upon, along with suggestions that families can use to help
ensure that their children are safely and responsibly
exploring the Internet:
Meeting someone harmful online
Unbeknownst to your children, the 12-year-old Star Wars
fan they meet in a chat room may actually be a 42-year-old
sexual predator. To prevent kids from unintentionally
becoming involved with someone harmful:
Talk with them about the fact that the people they meet
online may not really be who they say they are and may
want to do them harm.
Take an interest in the friends your children meet
online, just as you would the friends they meet at
school.
Prohibit or monitor your children’s use of chat
functions. Preview the chat rooms they use, and make
sure their screen names do not identify them as
children.
If your child has a web page, know what’s on it. Make
sure it does not include their photos, contact information
or other private family details.
Instruct your children NEVER to meet face-to-face with
online acquaintances. Let them know this is the single
greatest danger the Internet presents to their safety
and welfare.
Install blocking software or a filter to limit the sites
your children can visit or restrict them from giving out
their names, addresses and phone numbers or those of
your family and friends.
If you suspect online "stalking" or sexual exploitation,
report it to the police. You can also visit the National
Center for Missing and Exploited Children’s Web site:
www.missingkids.com.
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Inappropriate material
Every family has its own definition of what is
inappropriate. On the Internet, this may include sites
that are sexual in nature, contain violent or hateful
material, or advocate the use of weapons or harmful
substances. To protect your child:
Set rules about where your kids can go online and what
to do if they happen upon inappropriate sites. The Web
site
http://www.safekids.com
includes suggestions for creating a family Internet policy
and printable contracts.
Keep computer(s) in a public area of the house. When
your children are online, walk into the room periodically
and check on the sites they visit.
Set up Internet accounts in your name and be the
guardian of the password.
Limit when your children can use the Internet. The Web
site
http://www.getnetwise.com/tools/index.php3
definition=timelimits
includes information on time limiting software that
prevents kids from going online when you are not around.
Be aware of other computers your children may be using
(i.e., in friends’ homes) and make sure they are being
supervised.
Sorting fact from fiction
With so many sites to visit, it’s easy to be overwhelmed
by information. To limit the range of sites your children
have to choose from and to help them develop a "critical
eye:"
Require your children to use only kid-friendly search
engines, such as Yahooligans (www.yahooligans.com) Ask
Jeeves Kids (www.ajkids.com).
Encourage them to question information they find online.
By visiting sites with them, you can help them make
sense of the material they find and teach them to tell
the difference between facts, opinions, rumors and lies.
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