front 1 "A number of parental tracking apps and services exist for monitoring teen activity on smartphones: MamaBear, Life360, Canary and My Mobile Watchdog, to name a few." ~Lori Grishaw | back 1 no data |
front 2 "If we don't know what is going on in their digital world we can't protect them, we can't guide them," ~Ameeta Jain, Co founder of TeenSafe | back 2 no data |
front 3 "It really gives the message, 'I don't trust you at all,' It's over-involvement." ~Barbara Greenberg, a family clinical psychologist and expert on teen behavior. | back 3 no data |
front 4 Part of maturing, according to Greenberg, means making mistakes and learning from them. If the child feels that the parent is always watching and will always fix everything, the child may develop a lack of confidence and increased anxiety. | back 4 no data |
front 5 "I understand that parents want to use [tracking services] to make things safer, but they may be defeating their purposes. The way you make your children safe is to make them able to take care of themselves by themselves." ~Michael Brody | back 5 no data |
front 6 If teens are using them respectfully, appropriately, and with a little parental guidance, they should be fine. Take inventory of your kids' apps and review the best practices. ~Polly Conway | back 6 no data |
front 7 Ways to prevent them from anything going wrong on the internet: Underaged Facebook, the age limit is 13 but Facebook cant really know your age since you can lie. | back 7 no data |
front 8 Give them some rules. Like staying on the computer for a certain amount of time. | back 8 no data |
front 9 Watch what they post. Follow them on social medias like Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, and more. | back 9 no data |
front 10 "Teens are using Instagram to publicly text message, bully and sexualize each other. The benefit is that not only are parents not aware of the behavior, but teens are generally able to remain anonymous as Instagram has no requirement for true identities." ~Curtis Silver | back 10 no data |
front 11 Teach your children about respect. Respect themselves and others is always an important part of the internet. | back 11 no data |
front 12 Don't use social media to humiliate them. They won't be happy and they might rebuttal. | back 12 no data |
front 13 Tell them that whatever they put online is there forever. Texting, posting, and anything else | back 13 no data |
front 14 "If [parents] have these monitoring apps and they have their passwords to their various accounts, then they can go in and take a look and maybe head off a possible suicide," ~Jayne Hitchock | back 14 no data |
front 15 "They may feel that you're invading their privacy, but let’s be honest… You're paying the phone bill, so you can do whatever you want!" ~Anon. from Texas | back 15 no data |
front 16 "I don't believe children and teens have rights per se, because they aren't yet adults." ~Jason Perlow I'm human right? | back 16 no data |
front 17 "Is privacy a fundamental right for adults? Does it extend to children, particularly teenagers and young adults?" ~Unknown | back 17 no data |
front 18 You have the right to privacy. Even if you are a minor. ~Unknown | back 18 no data |
front 19 There are websites so you can learn about what your kids are looking though/at. ~Unknown | back 19 no data |
front 20 If teens are using them respectfully, appropriately, and with a little parental guidance, they should be fine. Take inventory of your kids' apps and review the best practices. ~Polly Conway | back 20 no data |
front 21 Set an age limit for your child. Including, phone, Instagram, SnapChat, FaceBook, Twitter, and others. | back 21 no data |
front 22 "I think parents need to say, not just, ‘Don't do this.' But, ‘Let me show you what it can do to somebody." ~Nancy McGarrah | back 22 no data |
front 23 "McGarrah says the part of the teen brain that controls impulsivity is still developing, so thinking about the consequences isn't their forte. If they're mad, sad, or just have something to say, they let it rip." | back 23 no data |
front 24 "It causes a lot of problems. What you write causes problems. What you post in terms of pictures causes problems," explained McGarrah. | back 24 no data |
front 25 "We don't want to snoop as parents. We don't have time for it. But if we're going to be able to keep our kids safe and have a little bit of an insight to what they're going through, then I'm okay with it," ~Jamie Stuart | back 25 no data |
front 26 "You can view new contacts that are added so you can monitor your children's friends, you can see what apps they are downloading, how often they are using the apps, which ones they use the most," said Gretchen Whitaker with Verizon Wireless. | back 26 no data |
front 27 "I think the technology needs to be an adjunctive to parenting. The talking is still the very most important thing," Micki Grimland said. | back 27 no data |
front 28 Teens want a sense of privacy. They want to know that they can be who they are without their parents trying to correct them. | back 28 no data |
front 29 Talking to friends helps teens feel that they can talk to someone without getting judged by their parents. | back 29 no data |
front 30 Parents want to know what their kids are doing without them knowing some of the time. | back 30 no data |
front 31 Some parents demand that you show them your phone. Whether or not something happened. | back 31 no data |
front 32 If you use social media then use common sense. | back 32 no data |
front 33 Always watch who adds/follows/request to follows/retweets just in case. It could be your friend or someone else. | back 33 no data |
front 34 Never give out any personal information unless its someone you always hang out with. | back 34 no data |
front 35 Parents should look at the internet at least once with you. So that they know what you look at. | back 35 no data |
front 36 Never tell a stranger where you live, your full name, where you go to school, not even what country you live in. | back 36 no data |
front 37 Never send someone a mean message or hate. They dont need you to tell them how to live their life. | back 37 no data |
front 38 Parents can go on to block settings and block certain websites for your protection. | back 38 no data |
front 39 Don't hate your parents for trying to protect you. They want what is best for you. | back 39 no data |
front 40 "I think parents need to say, not just, ‘Don't do this.' But, ‘Let me show you what it can do to somebody." ~Nancy McGarrah | back 40 no data |
front 41 "McGarrah says the part of the teen brain that controls impulsivity is still developing, so thinking about the consequences isn't their forte. If they're mad, sad, or just have something to say, they let it rip." | back 41 no data |
front 42 If teens are using them respectfully, appropriately, and with a little parental guidance, they should be fine. Take inventory of your kids' apps and review the best practices. ~Polly Conway | back 42 no data |
front 43 "Is privacy a fundamental right for adults? Does it extend to children, particularly teenagers and young adults?" ~Unknown | back 43 no data |
front 44 "I don't believe children and teens have rights per se, because they aren't yet adults." ~Jason Perlow I'm human right? | back 44 no data |
front 45 "Teens don't feel that they can have a life without their phones." ~Nancy Barlow | back 45 no data |
front 46 If teens are using them respectfully, appropriately, and with a little parental guidance, they should be fine. Take inventory of your kids' apps and review the best practices. ~Polly Conway | back 46 no data |
front 47 "I understand that parents want to use [tracking services] to make things safer, but they may be defeating their purposes. The way you make your children safe is to make them able to take care of themselves by themselves." ~Michael Brody | back 47 no data |
front 48 Part of maturing, according to Greenberg, means making mistakes and learning from them. If the child feels that the parent is always watching and will always fix everything, the child may develop a lack of confidence and increased anxiety. | back 48 no data |
front 49 "Kids just want trust. You were a kid once and probably did much worse things." ~Susane Gomez | back 49 no data |
front 50 "All in all, they are just trying to protect you. Just set your limits and tell them. They want whats best but give them knowledge about the internet." ~Michael Brody | back 50 no data |