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Julie Lindsay

Teens, Social Media, and Privacy | Pew Research Center - 0 views

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    Teens share a wide range of information about themselves on social media sites;1 indeed the sites themselves are designed to encourage the sharing of information and the expansion of networks. However, few teens embrace a fully public approach to social media. Instead, they take an array of steps to restrict and prune their profiles, and their patterns of reputation management on social media vary greatly according to their gender and network size. These are among the key findings from a new report based on a survey of 802 teens that examines teens' privacy management on social media sites
John Pearce

Author Danah Boyd on why teens and social media are 'complicated' (podcast) | Safe and ... - 6 views

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    "When it comes to understanding how teens use social media, there's perhaps no one more clued in than Danah Boyd, except maybe teens themselves. An ethnographer with a Ph.D. in information from the University of California at Berkeley, she has spent the last eight years speaking with and observing teens from all walks of life."
John Pearce

Russ Warner: Top Ways Kids Hide Their Online Behavior From Parents - 8 views

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    "A study last year revealed that nearly half of parents believe their teens tell them everything they do online, while 70 percent of teens revealed they have ways to avoid parental monitoring. In this fact lies the irony. Teens trick their parents in the following ways:"
John Pearce

New Study Uncovers What Teens Actually Share On Social Media | Edudemic - 5 views

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    "Ever wondered how students really act online? What they're actually sharing with their friends? Heck, if they're even using their real name and other information? Chances are good about 1 of every 4 teens seem to have a 'fake' social media account with false information. There's a lot more to this new privacy study on what teens actually share by the Pew Research Center that you should check out too."
Judy O'Connell

Social Networking: The Unharnessed Educational Tool. Undergraduate Research Journal - 8 views

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    In today's digital world teens are increasingly incorporating social networking into all aspects of their lives. This paper explores the topic of teen social networking and how the incorporation of social networking within the classroom can provide a valuable education on safe and constructive social networking, enabling teens to become responsible digital citizens.
John Pearce

Here's Where Teens Are Going Instead Of Facebook - Forbes - 2 views

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    Having surveyed teenagers in 30 countries, they revealed that the number of teenagers claiming to be active on Facebook (ie. doing more than just "liking" a separate page on the web) had dropped to 56% in the third quarter of 2013, from 76% in the first. The biggest decline in active usage (by 52%) was in the Netherlands; there was a 16% fall for American teens. Where are they going instead? Not surprisingly, it's mobile chat services like WeChat, and photo-sharing apps like Instagram and Snapchat. What's truly startling though, is how quickly global teenagers are taking up the services instead:
John Pearce

How Teen Media Consumption Has Changed Over the Years - 9 views

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    "Being a teenager in 2015 is very different than it was in 1995. While most teenagers spent their free time watching a little TV in the 90s, there were far fewer screens to put in front of their faces. A social network was the group of friends you hung out with at school. Now, things have changed. Technology has opened all kinds of new things to teens, some good and some bad. So just how as being a teenager changed from the 90s? Are things better or worse? Take a look at the infographic below from TeenSafe that presents true facts about teens and media and decide for yourself."
jo quinlan

Teens finally understand rights after lawyer translates Instagram terms into plain English - 3 views

  • how much do these teens understand what they've agreed to give up when they start an account with those sites?
  • of course no one reads them. I mean, most adults don't read them."
  • Most of those children have no idea what their privacy rights are, despite all of them agreeing to terms and conditions before starting their social media accounts
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • unwittingly giving away personal information, with no real understanding of who is holding that information, where they are holding it and what they are going to do with it."
  • Instagram's terms of use in total run at least seven printed pages, with more than 5000 words, mostly written in legalese.
  • teenagers said they understood very little about privacy rights on Instagram
  • registered at a postgraduate reading level
  • "Instagram, like many social networks, leaves the user with very little information to exercise their rights or any genuine privacy," the report said. "This exercise makes it clear that the current offering made by websites and apps to their users is not acceptable. Children and young people have the right to know how the relationship between their rights and the rights of the service that they have signed up to use, functions."
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    How much do teens understand what they've agreed to give up when they start an account with social media sites?
Judy O'Connell

Social Media Guidelines | Edutopia - 4 views

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    "More and more, social media is becoming a part of our daily lives. Just today, Mashable is out with a report that says Pintrest (which is less than a year old) is the #3 social network in the U.S. This report mentions that the amount of monthly traffic Facebook receives is seven billion page views, and Twitter receives 182. Again, these are just U.S. statistics. If we were to look at the numbers worldwide, I would guess they would be much, much higher. But it isn't just adults who are moving more of their lives to online spaces. In a recent Pew Internet survey, 73 percent of all teens used social networks daily. The most popular of these is Facebook; however, Twitter, Myspace and even LinkedIn are not far behind. And it isn't just teens. The #1 social network for kids under the age of 13 is Club Penguin. It is visited more times each day than the New York Times. "
John Pearce

Teenagers say goodbye to Facebook and hello to messenger apps | Technology | The Observer - 3 views

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    "Facebook made a startling admission in its earnings announcement this month: it was seeing a "decrease in daily users, specifically among teens". In other words, teenagers are still on Facebook; they're just not using it as much as they did. It was a landmark statement, since teens are the demographic who often point the rest of us towards the next big thing."
John Pearce

Your teen online the what the where and how | ACMA - 2 views

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    "New research from the ACMA is casting a clear light on what Aussie teens are involved in, online. It shows that kids from 14 - 17 years are, unsurprisingly, active players in Australia's digital economy, who are online more often than ever before, use the internet and mobiles for everything from entertainment to shopping, research, banking and sharing with friends."
Judy O'Connell

danah boyd | apophenia » How Teens Understand Privacy - 1 views

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    "In the fall, Alice Marwick and I went into the field to understand teens' privacy attitudes and practices. We've blogged some of our thinking since then but we're currently working on turning our thinking into a full-length article. We are lucky enough to be able to workshop our ideas at an upcoming scholarly meeting (PLSC), but we also wanted to share our work-in-progress with the public since we both know that there are all sorts of folks out there who have a lot of knowledge about this domain but with whom we don't have the privilege of regularly interacting."
Judy O'Connell

- Digital Citizenship Survey released - 9 views

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    "Consumption of digital content has become a daily part of teen and pre-teen students' lives and teachers around the world are looking to keep pace with educational resources about Digital Citizenship, according to a 2011 survey conducted by the National Council for Digital Citizenship (NCDC). NCDC conducted a survey of International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE) members last April to gain insight into educators' understanding of digital citizenship and classroom needs. More than 1,200 respondents completed the survey. The results were notable"
Judy O'Connell

Download details: "Own Your Space--Keep Yourself and Your Stuff Safe Online" Digital Bo... - 0 views

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    ""Own Your Space" was written by Linda McCarthy, for Internet savvy "tweens" & teens, and their parents or educators."
Catherine Ong

Siphoning the Fumes of Teen Culture: How to Co-opt Students' Favorite Social Media Tools - 1 views

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    An interesting read about social media and its use in the classroom.Thought provoking and challenging distinctions about teen use and teacher use and how to effectively combine the two
Rob Jacklin

How Tech Experts Monitor Their Teens on Social Media - WSJ - 3 views

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    "How Tech Experts Monitor Their Teens on Social Media How can parents keep up with smartphones? Tech executives take various approaches to managing their children's social-media use"
Julie Lindsay

How WeChat Is Extending China's School Days Well into the Night - 4 views

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    "WeChat is just the latest platform that intermediates interactions between teachers, parents, students," says Danah Boyd, a Microsoft researcher who studies social media and the author of It's Complicated: The Social Lives of Networked Teens. "No intervention around the technology will make any difference if the pressure-cooker culture doesn't change."
Judy O'Connell

Google+ Safety Center - Google+ - 10 views

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    "Social experiences require multiple players and so does safety. We all need to do our part. These resources are here for teens, parents, and teachers to learn more about how to use Google+ in a fun, smart, and safe way. We're glad you are here! "
John Pearce

Parents warned about social media app after 'harmful' comments - chicagotribune.com - 2 views

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    "The latest social media application to stir up controversy among teens has prompted one Lincoln Park school to ask students to delete Yik Yak and parents to make sure their child doesn't reinstall it."
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