|
• |
Create a list of
Internet house rules with input from your
kids. |
|
• |
Keep
Internet-connected computers in an open area and
out of your kids' bedrooms. |
|
• |
Investigate
Internet-filtering
tools
as a complement—not a replacement—for parental
supervision. |
|
• |
Help
protect your children from offensive pop-up
windows by using
pop-up blocking
software. |
|
• |
Talk
with your kids about their online friends and
activities just as you would about their other
activities. |
|
• |
Insist that your kids never agree to meet an
online friend. |
|
• |
Allow
your kids to use only monitored chat rooms on
reputable kids' sites. |
|
• |
Teach your kids
to never give out personal information when
using e-mail, chat rooms, or instant messaging,
filling out registration forms and personal
profiles, and entering online contests. |
|
• |
Teach
your kids not to download programs without your
permission—they might unknowingly download
spyware
or a
computer virus. Also teach your kids that
file-sharing and taking text, images, or artwork
from the Web may infringe on copyright laws. |
|
• |
Use
an
email
filter
to block messages from
particular people, or those that contain
specific words or phrases. |
|
• |
Encourage your kids to tell you if something or
someone online makes them feel uncomfortable or
threatened. Stay calm and remind your kids they
are not in trouble for bringing something to
your attention. Praise their behavior and
encourage them to come to you again if the same
thing happens. |
|
• |
Talk to your kids
about online pornography and direct them to good
sites about health and sexuality (Internet-filtering). |
|
• |
Insist on access to your kids' e-mail and
instant messaging accounts to make sure they're
not talking to strangers (monitoring
software). |
|
• |
Talk to your kids about responsible, ethical,
online behavior. They should not be using the
Internet to spread gossip, bully, or make
threats against others. |