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April 14, 2012

Online Privacy: Kids Know More Than You Think

Tina Barseghian:

Much of the anxiety around tweens and social media lies in the fear that they don't care about or understand privacy settings. Parents worry that kids will either willingly or unintentionally expose themselves to dangerous anonymous predators, or that they don't fully understand that the information they share about themselves can be used against them.

But tweens are much more savvy about their privacy settings than adults give them credit for, even when it comes to subtleties of "frenemies" dynamics, according to a small, qualitative study by researchers at the Harvard Graduate School of Education that's forthcoming in the journal Learning, Media, & Technology.

"Tweens value privacy, seek privacy from both strangers and known others online, and use a variety of strategies to protect their privacy online," wrote researchers Katie Davis and Carrie James, who conducted in-depth interviews with 42 middle-school students for the study. "Tweens' online privacy concerns are considerably broader than the 'stranger danger' messages they report hearing from teachers."

Posted by Jim Zellmer at April 14, 2012 1:19 AM
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