The Death of Secrecy, Or How to Raise Kids in the Internet Age

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Tips for Young Kids on the Internet:

 *  Make sure they know never to fill out questionnaires or any forms online or give out personal information.

* Stress that they should never agree to meet in person with anyone they've met online.

* Never let them respond to or send e-mail without you knowing.

* Don't let them get on sites with unmoderated chatting.  (Or, if you do allow them to, realize they will perhaps need a conversation about what language is appropriate!)

* Encourage them to tell you about thing they read that is upsetting. You definitely don't want them hiding the bad things they saw in order to be able to keep playing the game.

Of course, these are just safeguards, protecting children from bad things  they might come in contact with on the internet.  It's also our job as parents to guard against bad inclinations in our kids' hearts that are in there already!
Tips for Young Kids on the Internet:

* Make sure they know never to fill out questionnaires or any forms online or give out personal information.

* Stress that they should never agree to meet in person with anyone they've met online.

* Never let them respond to or send e-mail without you knowing.

* Don't let them get on sites with unmoderated chatting. (Or, if you do allow them to, realize they will perhaps need a conversation about what language is appropriate!)

* Encourage them to tell you about thing they read that is upsetting. You definitely don't want them hiding the bad things they saw in order to be able to keep playing the game.

Of course, these are just safeguards, protecting children from bad things they might come in contact with on the internet. It's also our job as parents to guard against bad inclinations in our kids' hearts that are in there already!

 and Jill Joiner


After Rutgers student Tyler Clementi’s roommate webcast Clementi’s sexual encounter with another man, he jumped off the George Washington Bridge, apparently unable to deal with the shame.  Across America, celebrities like Paula Abdul, Ciara, Perez Hilton, sex-advice columnist Dan Savage and Ellen DeGeneres all expressed devastation about the student’s death, and MTV filmed anti-suicide announcements. But more than the latest cause célèbre, parents struggling to raise children in the digital age are left scratching their heads.  How do we protect our kids from people inclined to do evil who find many easy opportunities on the internet?  The web has essentially ushered in the death of secrecy, as every flaw or skeleton can be potentially broadcast to millions.

If parents are talking to their kids at all about the internet, they almost universally have the same (wise) warning: be careful what you allow to get posted on the web, because it will last forever. 

Moms and dads everywhere worry that a moment of indiscretion will haunt their otherwise well-meaning children's lives indefinitely.  Will their kids’ future boss google them before a job interview and see a high school keg party?  Will a potential husband or wife google them before a date and see an ill-advised video posted on Youtube or Facebook?

This chilling scenario --  the death of secrecy -- is enough to scare parents into dire warnings and finger wagging over the potential consequences of the internet.  And Tyler Clementi’s death represents the culmination of all of our worst fears, in one fateful incident.

However, well-meaning parents might be missing the point in their admonitions about the evil nature of the internet.  Yes, its lack of accountability and ubiquitous anonymity does give mean-spirited people a platform for their bullying.  Is there any redemption to be found in the tool that was used to bring such despair to a person, a family, and ultimately an entire nation? 

Surprisingly, yes.

Just as the unfortunate incident in the dorm room graphically reminds us, the internet has a way of bringing what is done in the darkness to light. And it might not be an entirely bad thing.

Once you can get past the glossy, well-selected profile photos, our kid’s Facebook pages reveal what matters most to them.  If we are "friends" with them, we might be able to notice the tone they use to talk to others, can see first hand whether they are flirtatious or shy, and know what they really think about your vacations.  Through these and other channels, we begin to see their hearts – their real hearts -- one post at a time.

Good parents know – even study -- their kids... not as pesky spies attempting to thwart their next step, but as people who genuinely cherish them and want to know them better.  We must see them for what they are, not what we want them to be.  In the past, parents might hear a tidbit from a neighbor ("your son had a lot of visitors while you were gone Saturday night...") or some scoop from their friends parents ("Timmy told me Johnny seems to really be getting in a lot of trouble in basketball practice...") about the true nature of our kids.  But in the internet age, we have a unique ability to actually see -- with our own eyes -- the way they choose to represent themselves to their friends, and the world.

It takes guts to deal with their hearts -- instead of their future reputations -- and to look at them honestly as flawed human beings who need loving training and guidance as they try to figure out life. 

That's why -- if used wisely by savvy parents who aren't afraid to look at their kids in all of their moral complexity -- the internet, which brought devastation to the entire Rutgers community -- might be one of the strongest weapons in our arsenal when it comes to studying the most precious of subjects.

Our kids.

Nancy French

Nancy French is an author, commentator, and mother. Her next book, about the year her husband spent in Iraq is due out July 4, 2011. Connect with her on Facebook at www.facebook.com/NancyAndersonFrench and follow her on Twitter at https://twitter.com/nancyafrench.
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Comments

by bettie gobble #

on Thursday, Oct 07th 2010 @ 1:12am
Nancy and Jill, you are so on target!!! Case in point..my great niece, who I am FB friends with, posts her horiscope daily. Without making a judgement call, I simply told her I noticed she did this and that I had a book that could tell her about what life is about and what it holds..(The Message) of course I didn't say what it is, will send it to her, praying she will read it and allow God to speak to her. It is almost like we are allowed to do what I used to do privately..read my girls diaries....sorry, but I did! As parents we have to use any opportunity( and FB is a great tool) to look inside the lives of the children we love so!

by Tonya Jackson #

on Thursday, Oct 07th 2010 @ 9:11am
The Internet Age should also remind us that we should not behave in ways that we don't want broadcast to everyone because we never know when we are caught on video in public. To be recorded unknowingly in private would be an extreme violation of privacy (needless to say).

by Lisa Lamb #

on Friday, Oct 08th 2010 @ 13:27pm
This is so insightful and encouraging to me as a parent. I was deeply saddened by Tyler Clementi's death, and it is good to reflect on it as a wake-up call to parents to understand social networking sites, but more importantly, to pay attention to the spiritual dynamics at work in ourselves and our children.

by Jill Abrahamsen #

on Wednesday, Oct 13th 2010 @ 21:20pm
Wow! This is the best parenting advice I've heard about Facebook.... On a side note, I know my parents love FB as a way to "spy" on their grown children. Thank you for the great piece.

by Christy Cate #

on Sunday, Oct 17th 2010 @ 16:12pm
Great post, ladies! I feel the same way from a teacher perspective.

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Tips for Young Kids on the Internet:

 *  Make sure they know never to fill out questionnaires or any forms online or give out personal information.

* Stress that they should never agree to meet in person with anyone they've met online.

* Never let them respond to or send e-mail without you knowing.

* Don't let them get on sites with unmoderated chatting.  (Or, if you do allow them to, realize they will perhaps need a conversation about what language is appropriate!)

* Encourage them to tell you about thing they read that is upsetting. You definitely don't want them hiding the bad things they saw in order to be able to keep playing the game.

Of course, these are just safeguards, protecting children from bad things  they might come in contact with on the internet.  It's also our job as parents to guard against bad inclinations in our kids' hearts that are in there already!
Tips for Young Kids on the Internet:

* Make sure they know never to fill out questionnaires or any forms online or give out personal information.

* Stress that they should never agree to meet in person with anyone they've met online.

* Never let them respond to or send e-mail without you knowing.

* Don't let them get on sites with unmoderated chatting. (Or, if you do allow them to, realize they will perhaps need a conversation about what language is appropriate!)

* Encourage them to tell you about thing they read that is upsetting. You definitely don't want them hiding the bad things they saw in order to be able to keep playing the game.

Of course, these are just safeguards, protecting children from bad things they might come in contact with on the internet. It's also our job as parents to guard against bad inclinations in our kids' hearts that are in there already!