I appreciate that you shared your presentation. I have an upcoming parent presentation and some of the facts and parents tips will be very useful. Thank you.
Glenview Values Presentation - Digital Citizens - Presentation Transcript
Digital Learners Digital Citizens Glenview Values April 13, 2009
1,000,000,000,000+
Digital Learners Always On Always Learning Geeking Out
Using The Internet Young Instant Messaging Games Wireless Dating Housing New Jobs Create Content P2P Services Cultural Information Rating Things Adult Content Gen X / Boomers Transactions Get news / political info Health Job-related information Info for new jobs New housing Religious information Seniors Email Weather Use government web sites Get maps / directions News Research travel
33% of online teens share their own creations online, such as artwork, photos, stories or videos.
Over 50% have created content for the internet, using existing content they’ve found on the web.
“ Because they have been using digital technology all their lives, our children feel they have authority over it.” “ But technology cannot teach them how to reflect upon and evaluate the information they are gathering online.” -- Rose Luckin
Source: Online Behavior of Youth Survey Cox Communication Over 61% of teens have a profile on a site such as MySpace or Facebook.
Social Networking
MASH UP Photos Blogs Chat Email News Videos Contacts ?
20% of young people report that it is safe to share personal information on a public site. 37% said that they are “not concerned” about someone using information that they’ve posted. Source: Online Behavior of Youth Survey Cox Communication
71% have received messages online from someone they don’t know . 30% have considered meeting someone that they’ve only talked to online. 14% have actually met someone. Source: Online Behavior of Youth Survey Cox Communication
33% of fourth through sixth graders said they were completely unsupervised online. Among 2nd and 3rd graders, 20% reported that someone had been mean to them online within the last year.
Cyberbullying: Use of the internet, cell phones or other technology to hurt or embarrass another person.
Four in Ten teens Have experienced cyberbullying in the past year Source: Harris Interactive Youth Survey, 2007
Types of Cyberbullying
Flaming Flaming
Exclusion
Harassment / Denigration
Impersonation
How Students Deal
Change their email address
Digitally block the bully
Refuse to pass along messages
Tell their friends - disconnect the bully from the network
Talk to their parents / teachers
Source: Harris Interactive Youth Survey, 2007
Young people who have talked to their parents about internet safety:
Are less likely to have public photos of themselves online.
Are more likely to question messages from unfamiliar people.
Are less likely to forge relationships with strangers.
Are more likely to report a problem if it happens.
For Adults...
Listen and ask questions
Ask to see profile pages... tomorrow!
It’s not an invasion of privacy if everyone can read it.
See the good and the risk
Save the digital evidence
For Young Users
Help kids understand the value of their personal information from an early age.
Familiarize yourself with the internet by spending time online together.
Learn how young people use the internet and acknowledge their world.
Information on the web is permanent . It may not even be your property anymore...
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