Consider the first of nine myths about "digital natives" (online youth, basically, people who've never known life without the Internet) put forth by Profs. John Palfrey and Urs Gasser at a conference at Harvard Law School's Berkman Center: "Myth #1 - The online world presents a wholly new and completely different set of issues for youth we must address" (the ninth complements it: the myth that digital natives are a homogeneous group). [Even homogeneously speaking, research shows that young people themselves are getting smarter all by themselves about privacy and reputation management online (Pew/Internet data summarized in "Teens rule the Web").]
So, we might ask, should online safety be a separate field or discipline with unique safety expertise concerning some monolithic group called online youth? Certainly the Internet can augment and perpetuate problems in young people's lives in unprecedented ways, but research is showing that the substance of the problems is rooted in those real lives, not in a specific technology. It has to do with adolescent development and behavior much more than with technology. In fact, a great many types of expertise are becoming essential to the discussion - from neurologists on the teenage brain to psychologists on adolescent risk assessment to school counselors and administrators right in the trenches of gossip-cum-bullying blogs and cellphone photo-sharing. Sometimes we need to consult experts in constitutional law and computer forensics too (a dean of students once wisely had a computer forensics cop show students in a school-wide assembly how they're not as anonymous online as they think).
Where people with experience in online safety can help (in this transition time before the "digital natives" are parents and professionals themselves) is by...
My model for the clearinghouse approach is Netsafe in New Zealand. Providing online-safety education for all New Zealanders (youth, parents, schools, community organizations, companies, policymakers), Netsafe is an independent nonprofit organization with an active board membership representing New Zealand's Education Ministry, educators themselves, judges, corporations, parents, students, social workers, police, and New Zealand's Police Youth Education Service, Internal Affairs Dept., and Customs Service. Yes, Netsafe's an online-safety education organization working hard at the preventive end like many organizations in the US, but it also works at the remedial end, getting problems that come up to the right kind of help. An example of its clearinghouse role is in its direct relationship with New Zealand's two main mobile carriers' customer service departments, helping them get abuse calls about phone-based bullying and other problems to the right experts - sometimes parents, social workers, counselors, and school officials, not just law enforcement.
Probably no single organization in the US, with its population of 300 million (vs. New Zealand's 4 million), can handle all that Netsafe does nationwide in its country. The US's National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) - with its CyberTipline working at the remedial end and NetSmartz working up front at education and prevention (intelligently focusing more and more on safety in general, not just the online kind) - is certainly going for this more holistic approach. But our society is still too focused on the crime and law enforcement part of the "problem," and our online-safety field is still dominated by lawyers and law enforcement. Certainly society needs to keep addressing crime online, but the online-safety field - though maybe not quite obsolete - needs to reflect the breadth of young people's use of the Internet and all related devices and technologies, positive as well as a negative.
Comments, arguments, and other views on this from parents, educators, counselors, and other adults working with online youth would be most welcome in our ConnectSafely forum or via anne@netfamilynews.org.
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Anne, thanks. Great post! I found it while searching for Palfrey and Gasser's "Digital Natives Myths" session wiki. I particularly love your bullet points, especially the last one.
ReplyDeleteFundamentally, past approaches are less relevant today because, in my view at least, they don't adequately explore the core issues of motivation. Why do kids choose risky behavior? Because they WANT to. No amount of warning and scolding and frightening is going to get them to not WANT to do something. That's the lesson learned.
There is one exception, however. I think some of the material aimed at teens in the past is actually viable for pre-teens whose notions of relationships, particularly romantic ones, are still forming.
Here's what I mean. I'm a K-4 technology teacher, and I strive to 'translate' much of the lingo and messages into appropriate contexts for my young students. For example, I've found that my fourth graders, who mostly consider fellow students of the opposite gender "icky," are still very savvy to social issues and pressures. We talk about it! As a result, I am convinced they are more prepared than they would be with a standard FUD-based internet safety education curriculum.
Keep up the great work!
-kj-
Thanks for your comment, Kevin. Really appreciate your observation about elementary-school kids, an age group I don't focus on nearly as much as teens. Your point about getting to risk-taking motivation makes a lot of sense.
ReplyDeleteDid you find that wiki? Would like to go to it too! All best,
Anne