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February 25, 2014Kim Field and Brian JonesUOIT EDUC 5205G
Who, What & When?Sonia Livingstone, Leslie Haddon, Anke
Gorzig and Kjartan Olafsson with members of the EDU Kids Online
Network
Over 25 000 face-to-face interviews with European children and their parents
in 25 countries
2009 to 2011
KIDS ONLINE
Why?❖ To provide a rigorous
evidence base to support stakeholders in their efforts to maximise online opportunities for children while minimizing the risk of harm associated with internet use
KIDS ONLINE
Because...KIDS ONLINE
❖ Going online is thoroughly embedded in children’s lives
❖ internet use is increasingly individualised, privatised & mobile
❖ 9-10 year old internet users spend an average of 58 minutes online per day
❖ 15-16 year old internet users spend an average of 118 minutes online per day
Opportunities & Risks
KIDS ONLINE
OPPORTUNITIES RISK
OPPORTUNITIESRISK
The Balancing ActKIDS ONLINE
Online Opportunities
INCREASED OPPORTUNITIES
=experimenting with
relationships, intimacy & identity
VITAL to growing up & learning to cope in the
adult world
KIDS ONLINE
BUT
INCREASED OPPORTUNITIES
=linked to vulnerability &
the potential for harm
KIDS ONLINE
Risks vs Harm
4 MAIN RISKS:1.Seeing sexual images2.Receiving sexual
messages3.Being bullied4.Meeting online contacts
offline
HARM: ❖ the child’s
self-report of how bothered or upset they felt
KIDS ONLINE
Sexual Images & Sexual Messages
❖ 14% of 9-16 year olds have seen sexual images online BUT… only ¼ of these were upset (40% of their parents are unaware)
❖ 11% of 11-16 year olds have seen nudity online
❖ 8% of 11-16 year olds have seen someone having sex online
❖ 8% of 11-16 year olds have seen genitals online
❖ 2% of 11-16 year olds have seen violent sex online
❖ 2% of 11-16 year olds have been asked to talk about sexual acts online
❖ 2% of 11-16 year olds have been asked for an image of their genitals online
❖ 15% of 11-16 year olds have received sexual messages on their mobile devices BUT… only ¼ of these were upset by this (52% of their parents are unaware)
❖ 3% of 11-16 year olds have sent sexual messages to someone online
❖ more older children report exposure to sexual content &more males have seen sexual images BUT… younger children and females are more upset by it
❖ a child more who encounters risks offline is more likely to encounter risks online
KIDS ONLINE
Sexual Images & Sexual Messages
? These statistics, if replicated today would be similar/the same?
? Parents of 11-16 yrs are generally unaware of the extent of the sexual images their children have seen online ?
? Low percentages of 11-16 yrs admit actually being upset by online sexual images and messages. It follows then, that when these images or messages are not directly connected to them that they don’t see it as harmful ?
? Online Sexual images are easily accessible in schools ?
? 11-16 years olds have little apprehension about sending sexual images of themselves to someone they think they can trust ?
Comments?
KIDS ONLINE Online Bullying❖ 6% of 9-16yrs olds report having been bullied online
❖ 3% of 9-16yrs olds report having bullied other online
❖ 56% of online bullies say they have also bullied people off-line
❖ 55% of online bully victims report being bullied off-line
❖ Those who do not bully others report not being bullied by others off-line or online
❖ Girls reported being more upset by online bullying than boys
❖ 36% of online victims of bullying try to fix the situation themselves
❖ 77% of online victims of bullying tell someone (a friend or a parent)
❖ 46% of online victims block the person sending the hurtful messages
What does the EU Kids Online survey tell us?
KIDS ONLINE Online Bullying
? These statistics, if replicated today would be similar/the same?
? There is little connection between whether a person who is a bully online is also a bully off-line ?
? It is easier to be a bully online ?
? In your experience, young people who are not victims of bullying are also not bullies?
Comments?
What does the EU Kids Online survey tell us?
KIDS ONLINE
Meeting New Contacts Online
❖ 50% of 11-16yrs old find it easier to be themselves online than face-to-face
❖ 87% of 11-16yrs olds are in touch with people online that they have met in person first
❖ 30% of 11-16yrs olds are in touch with people online who they have not met face-to-face
❖ 9% have gone to an off-line meeting with someone they met online for the first time
❖ 48% of 11-16yrs old who have met a person off-line (whom they met online) meet a person not connected to their life previous to their online connection
❖ 61% of of 11-16yrs old who have met a person off-line (whom they met online) have parents who are unaware of this meeting
❖ In an adult’s view, young people “meeting strangers on-line” is a risk
❖ In a young person’s view, “meeting new friends on-line” is an opportunity.
❖ Some young people who meet a person off-line whom they met online are: sensation seekers, engagers of risky behaviour both on-line and off-line & have parents/guardians who place fewer restrictions on their internet use.
❖ 11% of 11-16yrs who met someone off-line (whom they met online) were bothered or upset by what happened (they were also more likely to be younger, have psychological difficulties and tended to be more vulnerable children
KIDS ONLINE
Meeting New Contacts Online
? As adults, meeting people off-line whom you’ve met online is risky ?
? As young people, meeting people off-line who you’ve met online is risky?
? As adults, meeting people on-line is an opportunity?
? As young people, meeting strangers on-line is an opportunity?
? As adults, meeting strangers on-line is risky?
Comments?
Predator’s Playground
http://www.ctvnews.ca/video?clipId=292096
❖ Next steps?❖ What can we do?
(Parent, Teacher, Administrator, Policy Maker etc.)
Policy Implications
Bullying: 1) Anti-bullying initiatives should be included in the promotion of internet use 2) on-line and off-line bullying is related and victims find it hard to escape 3) bullies have been victims themselves 4) education is needed because fewer than half tell another adult and fewer than half know how to block the person or delete their messages
Online Use: 1) Privatized (private locations); therefore, hard to supervise 2) restrict the internet vs finding other activities to do (inside and outside the home)
Social networking: 1)Privacy/safety settings are not user-friendly, 2)age restrictions can not be monitored
Contacts on line: 1) Parents’ awareness of what their child is up to is key
Recommendations Page 44/45 (Government, Industry, Awareness-raising, Children, Educators, Child Welfare, & Civil
Society)
A)Schools should take major responsibility for supporting children and their parents in gaining digital literacy and safety skills
B) Digital literacy and safety skills should be woven into curriculum
C) Expose children to a wider diversity of online activities while teaching critical literacy and safety skills
D)Children will tell peers when something upsets them, therefore schools should focus on peer mentoring.
ED
UC
AT
OR
S
KIDS ONLINE Newer Risks
USER-GENERATED CONTENT
• Hate sites
• Pro-anorexic sites
• Non-suicidal self-harm sites
• Drug forums
• Suicide sitesPERSONAL DATA MISUSE
• Identity theft
• Personal information abuse
• Financial cheating
What children do onlinethe “ladder of opportunities”
school work & games100% of children
75% of children
86% of children
56% of children
23% of children
add watching video clips for information & entertainment
add interactivity (social networking, instant messaging & email)
add downloading films & music and sharing content via webcam or message boards
add visiting chat rooms, file-sharing, blogging and spending time in a virtual world
KIDS ONLINE