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If you have kids at home using the computer, you are a first generation Internet Parent. You’re probably struggling to recapture (or perhaps establish for the first time) authority over your kids’ Internet behavior. According to a 2005 Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation Study, 23% of parents have rules about what their kids can do on the computer. It’s a serious challenge, and mastering it is critical to being an effective parent. Trust me I know – I have three teenagers at home. No invention in the history of man has had a more dramatic impact on a child’s world view, in such a short period of time, as the Internet. The entire range of human behavior, from the most noble to the most depraved, is available to our children online. As parents, our job is to manage and modulate our kids’ exposure to this wide range of content – good and bad. Unfortunately, credibility on the topic is hard to come by with our kids. However, there is a solution: Approach the problem from familiar ground. We’re the parents. We’re responsible for the family. And in particular, we’re responsible for the family's behavior in public. Public behavior is anything that is seen, heard, or otherwise witnessed by other people in a public place, whether at the high-school football game or at the local Starbucks. When our kids go out in public, we expect a certain kind of behavior. We’ve taught our kids this discipline since they were toddlers. The reality is our kids accept that we have the right to set boundaries on their behavior in public. So why not accept the same boundary-setting for the Internet? The Internet is the world's largest small town. You can find nearly everything – and everyone – in this virtual world we’re weaving. Social networking (socializing over the Internet) is a new form of behavior. It’s being invented by our kids every day. MySpace, consisting of over 70 million active accounts, is the most well-known locale for social networking. Your kid probably has a MySpace page – or some other social networking page. These sites are very public places, and yet they don’t feel like a public place to our children. It may seem obvious to a dispassionate observer that it's not a diary, or even a journal, but, surprisingly our kids, and even some parents, probably haven’t considered just how public these sites are, much less what an open door they provide into our kids’ lives. The content posted by our kids is widely circulated, and is likely to live on into their adulthood. This information gets searched, shared, and forwarded – and not just by “nice” people. The upshot is simple: Internet behavior is public behavior. This is certainly true for activities on social networking sites, but the same is true of email, chat rooms, and instant messaging. It may seem like a private conversation, but it's not. And the Internet is forever. Once information is out there, you can’t take it back. We as parents have the right and responsibility to monitor (and manage!) our kids' Internet behavior precisely because it is public behavior. We need to be more engaged, and not be afraid to ask questions: Is this behavior in the best interest of our child’s future? Does it represent our family’s best? Is it something we’re content to share with our neighbors and our broader community? We need to open up the dialogue with our kids in order to get them to focus on these questions. We also need to open up dialogue within our communities so that, in spite of our personal best efforts, our kids aren’t at the neighbor’s house surfing porn, gambling online, or chatting with a predator. Establish the relationship. Establish the rules. Remove the computer from the bedroom. Put monitoring, filtering, or logging software on the home computer. It’s not spying – it’s supervision – a normal and relevant part of our job as parents. Always keep in mind kids have a strange view that as long as we don't see it, it's not public. When we can make clear to our kids the Internet is a public place, we help them avoid the pitfalls – and dangers - of excessive Internet behavior, from a perspective they can understand and appreciate.
Article Source: http://www.parentingarticlelibrary.com
John Carosella is the VP of Content Control for Blue Coat Systems where he is responsible for overseeing the production of the K9 Web Protection Internet filtering product, and the company’s associated community outreach program created to raise awareness in communities, educate and encourage first generation Internet parents on the impact the Internet has on children, and on parenting strategies in the 21st century. k9webprotection.com
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