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Facebook and YouTube Offer Guidelines to Help Schools and Parents

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August 2, 2012 | 7:00 AM | By MindShift
By Matt Levinson

http://blogs.kqed.org/mindshift

 

OOnline social giants YouTube and Facebook have taken big steps to attempt to provide guidance on digital citizenship for kids online. Google (which owns YouTube) just launched its ten-step online program for smart and safe YouTube use, with a series of instructional videos that hit on topics from cyberbullying to privacy. And Facebook has teamed up with Edutopia to help schools create social media guidelines.

As schools figure out their social media policies, Facebook is reportedly exploring allowing children under the age of 13 to use the site. “Recent reports have highlighted just how difficult it is to enforce age restrictions on the Internet, especially when parents want their children to access online content and services. We are in continuous dialogue with stakeholders, regulators and other policy makers about how best to help parents keep their kids safe in an evolving online environment” a Facebook statement says.

In the meantime, companies are sprouting up to quell (or stoke, depending on perspective) parent fears. From FBI Child ID, which “stores a photo of your child, along with a detailed description that might help others find him or her,” to Footprints, which is a location-sharing app to “help parents track their children’s movements,” parents are searching for solutions to “ease their fears,” according to a recent New York Times article.

The Times also reports that there are also slang translation apps to help parents make sense of text speak, sites that track a child’s Facebook and social media pages looking for inappropriate language, another site that alerts a parent when a child tries to access an inappropriate site, and one that monitors the time spent on Facebook.

WHAT CAN PARENTS DO?

As school policies and rules online continue to change, parents can talk openly with kids about being smart digital citizens, and can learn together.

  • Watch the YouTube digital citizenship videos together as a family. Set up a lesson a day and talk through the different topics presented. This also gives the parent the space to learn from and with the child.
  • Talk about what qualifies as unkind, hurtful online behavior and warrants a report to Facebook under its new reporting mechanism.
  • Read the news together and talk about provocative stories that highlight topics around social media.

Matt Levinson is the Head of the Upper Division at Marin Country Day School in Corte Madera, Calif. and the author of From Fear to Facebook: One School’s Journey.


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