Parental software is an aid, not an answer
Parents need to set filters
With filtering software, someone else has set up the filters. That requires each parent to study the software and see if it is filtering out what is not wanted but also not filtering out what is OK, based on that family’s values.
“My concern about filtering technology and younger children, under the age of 8 or 9, is that I don’t think the filters are effective enough,” says Willard. “I would be more inclined to make my own list of bookmarked sites, unless I found a product that had criteria that addressed these concerns.”
Time-control software essentially locks the computer down, valuable for parents whose children are home alone before or after school, or whose teenagers get up during the night to use the computer after everyone else is in bed.
Kid-safe browsers designed for younger children are more comprehensive, as they’re set up to allow kids to wander in a pre-approved virtual world.
Again, that approval comes from someone else, so parents have to test-drive the browsers for their own peace of mind.
Aftab likes KidZui, created by a California dad who wanted his children to feel free to surf the Net, but to do so safely.
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KidZui KidZui, a Web browser for young children, was created by a California dad who wanted his children to feel free to surf the Net, but safely. It provides a "fenced-in" Internet experience. |
Willard likes My Kids Browser. It, too, can be downloaded for a free trial and the full version is $39.95.
Both experts say there are many Web browsers to choose from, and a little research on parents’ part should lead to the one best for their family.
All these help herd younger children, but everything changes once they get older.
“It is virtually impossible to keep teenagers in electronically fenced play yards,” says Willard, a single mother of sons ages 12 and 16 and a daughter, 15.
And it’s no secret they are online.
“Roughly 93 percent of teens use the Internet,” says Mary Madden, senior research specialist with the Pew Internet & American Life Project. “It is absolutely woven into the fabric of daily life in the United States.”
Madden says Pew studies show that “65 percent of parents check up on their teens, going to the computer and looking at the browser after they go online.”
She says parents are using a variety of tools to keep an eye on their teens’ online behavior.
“One of the most popular things is placing the home computer in an open area; 74 percent of teens say the computer is in public area of the home,” she says, citing data from a Pew survey last year of parents and children ages 12 to 17.
The survey also showed that 68 percent of parents have rules about Internet sites their children can or cannot visit, as well as what kinds of information they can share with people online.
'We need parental solutions'
That highlights what the experts say is the most important parental control: parental involvement.
“We don't need ‘technical’ solutions,” says Larry Rosen, psychology professor at California State University Dominguez Hills, who specializes in the psychology of technology, and author of “Me, MySpace, and I: Parenting the Net Generation.”
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The parent solutions he’s talking about include teaching children how to use the Internet safely — on their own.
“We are not teaching young people what to do,” says Willard.
Internet safety, she says, is just like any other child safety concept. Parents hold their children’s hands and teach when it’s OK to cross the street. Only when they learn that lesson do parents let them cross alone. Or walk to school alone. Or drive alone. The same attitude should prevail when it comes to the Internet.
That’s especially important, these experts say, since the desktop in the open area of the house, or the laptop in the family room, aren’t the only way kids are getting to the Internet. Think cell phones and game systems and more, as surfing becomes ever more mobile.
All the more reason to get kids ready for the virtual world.
Says Aftab: “Kids can walk around now with more Internet technology right in their backpack ... Xbox, personal gaming systems, cell phones. They are connected to the Internet everywhere they go, with everything they touch.”
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