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3/25/2004
As the parent of three teenagers (my oldest is now 20, but my youngest is 14) I have learned how terribly frustrating it can be to harp on something, maybe for years, and be ignored - and then find my child fully accepting of the same information or guidelines coming from someone else. But I finally did learn, and sometimes now I set up situations (very sneakily) where they hear stuff I want them to hear and accept and would say myself if I thought they'd listen, but they hear it from someone else.
With respect to a lot of the stuff we wish our student computer users on campus would listen to us about, or learn from us, there are a growing number of outside resources for younger people that higher education IT staff can modify or recreate and use in a similar way. The FBI's "A Parent's Guide to Internet Safety" is one; i-SAFE is another. I wish there were similar efforts aimed at the slightly older children we call young adults who populate our campuses. If there were, you could be sneaky and find a way for your student government to broadcast links to these to your student body. Or, I bet you could spend one staffer's time for a couple of days and figure out some viral marketing method to spread the word.
Last year, in The Feral User, I wrote: "We've almost got a Lord of the Flies situation with our freshman class and its cyberculture. They've grown up with access to IT and the Internet and have acculturated in a shadowy, underground cyberworld that is not under adult supervision. And most of them have been exposed to little or no "civilizing" processes with regard to their computer usage - until they come to campus.
I wasn't exactly focused on user safety in the personal sense so much as social safety from users, but I recently spoke to counselors at an institution that will remain nameless here, but which has a large, mostly male student population and is somewhat geographically isolated. I learned that a significant number of the younger college students there get tied up in online relationships that are troublesome, in that they cause problems both emotionally and academically for the students involved - and sometimes become a problem in the physical world as well. It makes me wish that there was a version of "A Parents Guide to Internet Safety" written for that population.
Recently, I've seen the products of some of the efforts to work with children and young adults and instill a sense of online social and personal responsibility. It's nice to see some decent resources become available but I'm not having much luck finding good resources for students already in college. Here's a little bit about the two best I've seen for younger kids.
From the FBI:
The FBI's "A Parent's Guide to Internet Safety" can't be described as tremendously exciting. It d'es contain a lot of good advice. College age students are likely to be turned off by its tone, though, as it's clearly parental in nature and aimed at parents of younger children. It couldn't hurt, though, if somehow the existence of this free online document became known to large numbers of your students. Whether they'd like to admit it or not, college age students are vulnerable to much of the same problems as younger students when it comes to meeting inappropriate people on line and possibly engaging in dangerous relationships with them.
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