You may’ve noticed this too: Online and on-phone conversations have gotten very mixed-media – very artful, in a sense. Have you noticed that our children are among the most creative mixed-media conversationalists now? It’s delightful to see the fun they have with this. Take stickers, for example. Because they’re now part of Version 3 of [...]
Filed in apps, cellphones, Digital Tech, Mobile, mobile socializing, Social Media
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Also tagged apps, cellphones, emoji, emoticons, Instagram, mobile technology, Path, Social Media, stickers, Teens
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Wired speculates that, because some Asian texting apps – such as LINE, WeChat, Gangnam Style and Kakaotalk – have “slick user interfaces that focus on simplicity and visually pleasing graphics,” these fast-growing apps will soon cross the Pacific, and at least one of them will take off in the US too. “Today, less is more.” [...]
Filed in iPhone, Mobile, mobile internet
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Also tagged Android, apps, cellphones, Google Play, iOS, KakaoTalk, Kik Messenger, LINE, smartphones, Teens, WhatsApp
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Are iPads bad for little children? I ask that metaphorically, for two reasons: because iPads represent a host of tablets and other touchscreen devices children seem to play with joyfully and intuitively, and because that attraction makes it extra hard to imagine kids could self-regulate that iPad play. And yet they do. Take Gideon, for [...]
Filed in digital media, Digital Tech, Parenting, tech parenting
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Also tagged Child Development, children, digital media, digital play, digital tools, Hanna Rosin, iPads, Parenting, tablets, The Atlantic
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It’s interesting that Daily Beast writer Caitlin Dixon precedes her question “When did we let our guard down?” with the story of sleeping on strangers’ couch in Italy after finding them in a couch-surfing site. Yes, she let her guard down (but the people were great hosts). What’s interesting, though, is that she compared couch-surfing [...]
Filed in Online Safety Education, Parenting, Privacy, Risk & Safety, tech parenting
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Also tagged couch-surfing, danah boyd, David Finkelhor, Larry Rosen, Parenting, Privacy, Safety, Teens
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My visit to Australia for the World Congress on Family Law & Children’s Rights has been rich in hospitality and insight – I’ve had the privilege of talking with people in government, online-safety advocacy, industry, school (students!), primary and secondary education, research, of course many parents and grandparents, and even “Australia’s Dr. Phil,” as Michael [...]
Filed in childrens rights, online youth, Risk & Safety, teen social networking, Teens, Youth, youth technology, Youth-Risk Research
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Also tagged Alannah and Madeline Foundation, apps, cellphones, cybersafety, Internet safety, Michael Carr-Gregg, mobile technology, online safety, Social Media, Teens, World Congress on Family Law and Children's Rights
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Ninety-five percent of US 12-to-17-year-olds use the Internet, 93% have access to a computer at home and 71% of teens with that computer at home share it with other family members, according to a study released today – the biggest explanation, most probably, for why teens’ Net use has gotten so mobile. It allows them [...]
Filed in Mobile, mobile communications, mobile socializing, mobile trends, Parenting, Pew Internet, Research, social media research, tech parenting, Youth
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Also tagged Berkman Center, cellphones, Internet, Mobile, Parenting, Pew Internet, smartphones, Teens
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These are projects that get young people and classrooms participating in the digital maker movement: Current or aspiring videogame designers and videographers have about a month to submit their creations to three different contests: The National STEM Videogame Challenge, Whyville’s game design contest, and Trend Micro’s What’s Your Story video producing contest. Design a videogame [...]
Filed in constructivist learning, education technology, learning, Literacy & Citizenship, online safety, School & Tech
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Also tagged contests, digital media, ed tech, Joan Ganz Cooney Center, learning, maker movement, online safety, school, STEM, Trend Micro, video game design, video production, videographers, Whyville
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Perfect for making Safer Internet Day 2013 smarter is a new study from Australia about how Net safety works best: open communication and growing competency on the part of parents every bit as much as kids. That’s really boiling down an insightful study from the “Living Labs” at University of Western Sydney that paired up [...]
Filed in International research, online safety, online teens, Parenting, Research, Risk & Safety, Safety, social media research, tech parenting, Teens, Youth
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Also tagged Amanda Third, Damien Spry, Internet safety, Kathryn Locke, online risk research, Parenting, Safer Internet Day, Teens, Young and Well Cooperative Research Center
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Monday’s post was about two surveys of US teachers about what technology’s doing to students’ academic performance. Today, a guest commentary from Marianne Malmstrom, who teaches grades 3-8 at the Elisabeth Morrow School in Englewood, N.J., after I asked her what she thought of the research and the New York Times’s coverage: “At least the [...]
Filed in education research, education technology, media research, Research, School & Tech, school innovation, social media research, teachers
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Also tagged education reform, educational technology, innovation, research, School Policy, school tech, teachers
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This article was originally published July 19, 2012, then my service’s server crashed, losing months of data. So reposting 10/20/12. I hope parents and educators have seen these two clear signs of how kids are using social media to “be the change.” There’s 14-year-old Julia Bluhm in Maine who noticed that friends in ballet class [...]