Internet Safety for Elementary School Kids Tips
Essential Internet guide
The facts: Most tweens spend about 1-2 hours a day online
- 90% of tweens have used the Internet by the time they're 9 years old
- Nearly 3 out of 4 parents of kids 9 and up who use the Internet at home say they know "a lot" about what their kids are doing online
- More than 1 in 5 tweens post information about themselves online, including pictures and how old they are
Tips for keeping your child safe online
1 Tell your kids:
- Never share names, schools, ages, phone numbers, or addresses
- Never send pictures to strangers
- Keep passwords private (except to parents)
- Don’t open any mail from strangers
- If something mean or creepy happens, immediately get a grown-up
2 Visit only age-appropriate sites. Check out the site before your kids visit. Know what features exist – chat functions, game play, virtual worlds.
3 Search safely. Use safe search settings for young kids or filtering software to limit inappropriate exposure.
4 Avoid strangers. Tell your kids that people aren’t always who they say they are in cyberspace. If someone they don’t know talks to them (outside of controlled environments like Club Penguin), tell your kids they shouldn’t respond.
5 Be a good cyber citizen! Remind kids that an Internet playground is still a playground and they need to play nice. A good rule of thumb: If they wouldn’t do something in real life, they shouldn’t do it online. Show your kids where they can report mean behavior or unkind content.
6 Online cheating? It’s still cheating and it’s a no-no – pure and simple.
7 Keep the computer in a central place where you can see what’s going on.
8 Establish limits on the amount of time they spend online. Use a family media agreement. (Free at commonsensemedia.org)
9 View your own habits carefully. You are their role models.
10 Set clear rules beforehand. But mostly, be involved and have fun!

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wetpaint
i just surf until i find something good
i'm in 6th grade