I have been rethinking "internet safety" and have a discussion running
on the ISED ning site with some great presentations shared by others. I
presented at a high school yesterday and the first thing one of the kids
said was, "I know, you're going to tell us about sexual predators".
Actually, I wasn't, although we did cover it. Instead we talked about
evaluating their online identity, understanding how easy it is to lose
control over your image, your email, and your off-hand comments, and
asked them to pay attention to who they are talking to. These savvy
teens were incredibly responsive and grateful, too! You can see what
we've posted so far at:
http://isenet.ning.com/group/evolvinginternetsafetysocialnetworkingdiscu
ssions=20
I'll post your links there, unless you want to join the discussion and
post them yourself!
Jenni Swanson Voorhees
Sidwell Friends School
-----Original Message-----
From: A forum for independent school educators
[mailto:ISED-L@LISTSERV.SYR.EDU] On Behalf Of Johnson, Jason P Mr
WRAMC_Wash DC
Sent: Thursday, February 28, 2008 12:15 PM
To: ISED-L@LISTSERV.SYR.EDU
Subject: Pigs not Sharks in Online Predation Risk (UNCLASSIFIED)
Classification: UNCLASSIFIED=20
Caveats: NONE
=20
For those of you conducting or developing on-line safety programs, a
recent posting on Slashdot is worth looking at. =20
=20
http://interviews.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=3D08/02/26/1322248
=20
Essentially, it takes a hard look at the" 1 in 5 children will be
solicited on-line" statistic, it's validity, and some problems with
interpretation by groups like the National Center for Missing and
Exploited Children. It highlights factual issues, given that recent
data states that number of children solicited has declined, and study
design issues (it does not distinguish solicitors by age, or properly
express children's reactions). =20
=20
I found it interesting because it helps tease out the nuances of on-line
safety when so many program and online resources take a simplistic,
internet predator-based approach that focus on unknown adult pedophiles
rather than say - the 22 year old brother of a friend. Admittedly, it
is only one side of the argument, but I think it has value in the
over-all conversation. This linked article was also worth a look:
=20
http://www.livescience.com/strangenews/060516_predator_panic.html
=20
_Jason
=20
PS: "Pigs not Sharks" is a summation of Bruce Schneier's famous quote on
our ability to evaluate risk
http://itc.conversationsnetwork.org/shows/detail119.html
=20
___________________________________
Jason Johnson - Program Director
Web Services Branch - Walter Reed Army Medical Center Ingenium (ISO
9001:2000 certified)
Office: 202-782-1047
Cell: 202-262-0516
jason.johnson@ingenium.net
jason.p.johnson2@us.army.mil
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