Updated Oct 2021: Kids are naturally fascinated by Adult Content, which is how we refer to pornography. It is so hard for Teachers, parents to have this talk with their own kids. Sexting is our most requested internet safety talk for Senior schools. Bookings Enquiry
The main purpose of the Talks is to explain the consequences, making Students aware of the effects on their future, careers, interests, relationships. What does sexting mean? It is a combination of sex and texting, known as sexting. People have been texting suggestively to each other since the mid-1990s. It's not new, it's much more explicit and graphic now, unfortunately.
We have to be direct, honest, make an impact. The aim is to prevent them from experimenting with phones filming themselves and others. Then telling the straight out truth NOT to share it with anyone online. If they film sex, private parts tell them to delete and move on. Some things simply can't be put back in the bottle.
Bookings Enquiry
This is the reason we do talks. Most parents just can't talk to their own kids about this topic. The best way is to ask them about sexting and wait for a response. If you are very lucky, they will talk about it and you will warn them about the consequences.
They are much more likely to ignore us from embarrassment rather than intentionally. Start again another day. Make it clear this is a conversation that is going to happen.
Sadly, there are many examples in the media, and most kids will know from experience examples where images and videos went viral only to ruin a career, relationship or reputation. We use these stories can be a great opportunity to talk with your teen about sexting.
Make it very clear, ‘that you show me yours and I will show you mine’ is an expensive game. Fun but a disaster afterwards. Teenage relationships end, emotions run high and pictures get distributed. Make sure your kids understand any sexting pictures will probably be shared, and the people doing the sharing will be their friends.
Snapchat is the preferred portal for sexting for a variety of reasons.
Wrong. Facebook owners of Instagram and WhatsApp say they have researched this a lot. Here is what they found.
It is worth noting that a small group of people might be a couple of thousand to Facebook.
In our talks, we use real examples to drive this message home to Students, Young Adults, the impact on mental wellbeing, friendships, jobs, college and careers. Get through School and College without incident, that's the message. Mistakes will happen and you can recover from them too.
Schools, Colleges even Employers often mention sexting in connection with cyberbullying. People who sext usually feel mocked, coerced, or solicited— bullied into the behaviour and bullied because of the behaviour. Our most-read ever Online Reputation
The iPhone's arrival in 2007 was a game-changer. Kids now view pornography (sometimes extreme) as young as 7-years-of-age. Girls & Boys exchange videos, images and live stream from as young as 11 years of age. Most 11-year-old kids or 12-year-old kids own a smartphone, so they all have the capacity. Most parents have not implemented parental control. As a result, we are doing the sexting talk in an age-appropriate fashion from 11 to 12 years of age only at the request of the School, parents, teachers, Head of School. Kids Talk Page
As kids approach puberty, we talk about changes in their body, relationships, and sexuality — teaching them about risks and how to avoid them. Telling kids about sexting is important. Your kids will need to know why NOT to sext and what to do if they feel that someone is pressuring them into it.
Even if the image, video, or text was meant for one person, once it's been sent or posted, it's out of their control. Frequent conversations in small doses are more effective than just one long, boring, threatening lecture about not sexting and staying safe on the Internet.
Being a parent and not a friend to your kids develops safety, appropriate use, and texting boundaries. As new relationships develop, talk about respect and spending face-to-face time with their friends. This forms a good foundation for healthy boundaries, self-respect, and safety you want to instil in them.
Keep talking about the above gently. Conversations like this should occur throughout kids' lives, not just when problems arise.
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It might be pretty tempting to just shut down your teen’s phone when they come home from school. Doing so could end in mistrust and result in your teen hiding more from you than before.
Parental control software monitors and limits when and what websites or apps your child can access. Keeping up with what your child is doing online and setting some of your boundaries with them can protect your family.
Contact us, for more information or to book an internet safety talk for kids in your school.
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Article about Online Reputation Need to know - Snapchat
Let's talk about Sexting Pics on teenagers' phone Help!
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