Weapons in the Hands of Children

Articles» Mobile Phone» Weapons in the Hands of Children (page 2)

by Susan Dunn, MA, Personal and Professional Development Coach.
Monday December 18th, 2006 08:15 PM

7. Don't count on social norms. Be proactive.

Professor Thomas thinks social norms will develop, but personally I question that. If so, people would not be rude with cell phones already. If it comes, great. In the meantime, educate your child on responsible cell phone, camera and computer use and model good behavior yourself.

8. Camera cell phones can be used for identity theft.

Teens need to be aware when paying by credit card. Anyone standing near you with a cell phone in their hand can take a picture of your credit card and get all the vital information from it.

9. Establish rules with your child or teenager and enforce them.

Don’t allow your child to have a computer in their bedroom, teach them respect for others, and educate them in the use of technology (just as you do bikes, microwaves, electric knives, gas grills, guns and cars). Go over what bullying is and make direct inquiries of your child. Here ( http://www.canoe.ca/NewsStand/LondonFreePress/News/2003/09/02/174030.html ) is a list of symptoms to watch for in both bullied and bully. It's considered the preferred bullying method of girls, BTW.


10. Get informed and speak up.

One danger is that your child may know more about these tech toys than you do. Learn their capabilities and how to monitor. For instance, you can check on cheating and bullying by clicking into the phone’s text messaging history. Teach your child to speak up when bullying occurs (and do so yourself at work). 85% of all bullying occurs when there is only a peer present.

Work with school officials re: your child. Ray Hughes, violence prevention co-ordinator with the Thames Valley District School Board says a class or seat change can help the bullied, and bullies need consistent, non-violent consequences for their actions both at home and at school.

Work to establish Emotional Intelligence programs at school and at work that teaches respect and "social norms". Social norms are made, not born.

About the Author
©Susan Dunn, MA, The EQ Coach, http://www.susandunn.cc . Coaching, distance learning, and ebooks around emotional intelligence for your continued personal and professional development. I train and certify EQ coaches. Get in this field, dubbed “white hot” by the press, now, before it’s crowded, and offer your clients something of real value. Start tomorrow, no residence requirement. Mailto:sdunn@susandunn.cc for free ezine.

We hope you have found our articles section useful and are able to put the info to good use. We will continue to update this section with articles that we hope you will enjoy so please check back regularly.


<-Back | 1 | 2 | Next->

Free Webmaster content - We provide you with some great articles on mobile phones. Webmasters may reproduce these articles on their own site (or link to them) as long as the following rules are followed;

[1] Articles must be published "as is" (unedited).

[2] Articles must be published with the author's bio paragraph (resource box) and copyright information included.

[3] URLs in the resource box should be set as hyperlinks.

[4] Whenever possible, authors should be notified of intent to publish.

[5] Articles cannot be used in spam communications.