I think he's right. Whether or not you agree that sexting is digitally exacerbated normative adolescent behavior, I hope you agree that adults need to tread very lightly or at least carefully in these situations, with child-pornography law a factor (see ConnectSafely's tips). But forget about school policy and law enforcement for a second and just think about parenting: Certainly we need to apply our values to our parenting and, if those values call for it, try to mitigate the sexualized media environment surrounding us all, but it's best to spread that teaching and parenting out over time and not allow ourselves to be so shocked by what we're seeing as to react in ways that send kids into determined resistance, "underground" online, where our values probably don't have much influence at all.
Cornell University assistant professor Sahara Byrne, while presenting a survey of parents and kids about online-safety strategies at the Harvard Berkman Center last week, found all kinds of evidence that "the more angry kids are, the more they're going to try to restore their freedom" – or assert it. That's why sudden changes in parenting style like overreaction or anger, banning technology (which to a teen can be like banning a whole social life), or suddenly installing monitoring software can have unintended, sometimes risky effects and workarounds.
So we're not really in such a fix, fellow parents. We just need to mindful of the concerns we have and channel them wisely. Trying to make our children avoid risk altogether can be riskier than being consistent about "our family's values," letting them do developmentally appropriate adolescent risk assessment, and being there for them when stuff comes up. I love how parent and media professor Henry Jenkins says it – that we need to "watch their backs rather than snoop over their shoulders."
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I saw an article online where the students response to a sexting presentation by law enforcement was primarily to ask questions about the work arounds (how to sext without violating the law!!!)
ReplyDeleteThis is exactly what happens when a drug prevention program focuses on bringing law enforcement or the judiical sector in to speak about the legal consequences of drug use. Kids are not impressed by the legal consequences!!!! Help them to understand the physical (drugs) emotional, social/relational and reputational consequences and you might get somewhere.
Anne, Great post. Although I don't really get the Jenkins quote: "Watch their back, not over their shoulders."
ReplyDeleteI'm thinking either too literally, too metaphorically, or too much about it to get it.
Thanks for your comment, John. Does it help to say that I think constantly watching over a kid's shoulder is along the lines of helicopter parenting, which to me is a sign of authoritarian or hard-power as opposed to soft-power parenting.
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