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Parent Info (Special thanks to Parry Aftab for her input. For more information, go to www.netbullies.com, wiredkids.org )
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Do you know what your
child or teen is doing on line? Do you know who he receives e-mail
from, who she instant messages with, or what a Xanga account is?
Parents need to know what their kids are doing in cyberspace. The best way to find out is to ask. Unfortunately children carefully keep cyberbullying from their parents, sometimes until it is too late. Teaching kids how to respond to and, more importantly, when to ignore cyberbullying is crucial. Like its adult-version counterpart - cyberstalking and harassment, different motives and kinds of harassment require different responses. Some should be simply ignored and the sender blocked. Others should be reported to parents and teachers. And, in certain instances, sometimes the police have to get involved. Offending cyberbullies can have their screen name blocked. (This only blocks that one screen name, however, not the entire account. And in the case of a free webmail account, can be easily discarded in favor of a new account and screen name.) And, with very few exceptions, cyberbullies can be identified by the trail left in cyberspace. In addition, monitoring software applications can gather and save evidence in a form law enforcement agencies and lawyers need. There are also easy ways of blocking communications from everyone other than trusted friends of the kids. There are also ways to easily search for references about anyone online to spot cyberbullying public posts before they become a
problem (i.e. Google). . The pain requires gentleness and understanding. The victim needs us to listen and to try and understand. We can’t belittle it. We need to honor their fear, embarrassment and humiliation. But you should not play into the hands of the
cyberbully by overreacting. |