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Guidance for Parents and Guardians
(Guidance
For Children And Young Users click here)
As responsible parents or guardians you would never leave a child alone
in a strange area, let them visit a city unsupervised, let them enter
adult-only shops or clubs or meet a total stranger.
Unfortunately, every time the child in your care logs on to the web
without supervision they face the same potential dangers that they do in
all the situations above.
The opportunities offered by the web can be exploited. It can allow
those who target children to enter your home and interact with your
children.
The Internet continues to grow in its importance to our society and
possibly has even more significance in our children's lives. Parents and
carers of all kinds need to be familiar with both the opportunities and
the dangers of the web.
Chatroom users can easily be
exploited by certain adults, who use tricks and subterfuge to hide their
true identities and intentions.
By following a few simple steps it is possible to use the internet to
its full potential without encountering any of the pitfalls. As well as
following the advice in these pages, you may also want to contact your
local computer retailer.
How you can reduce the risk
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Try to site computers in an area where it is easy to monitor what
your child is doing. If possible have it in a family room like the
living room.
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Establish reasonable guidelines for their use of the internet or
chatline. Talk about the six tips for chat room use with them, print
them off and place them in a visible place near the computer.
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Become familiar with the internet and the services or sites your
child uses.
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Get to know the language your child uses, there are a lot of short
cuts for instance, h8 for hate, u for you, RU for are you etc.
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Get to know their on-line friends in the same way you would their
other friends
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If your child arranges to meet an on-line friend ensure it is in
public place with a responsible adult present
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Encourage them to come to you if they see or read anything on the
internet which upsets them
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If in
doubt, contact the police.
If you think your teenager is too savvy or streetwise to get themselves
into danger, it is worth noting that a survey found around one in 20 of
children aged between seven and 16 admitted seeing something on the web
that upset or embarrassed them.
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