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MediaWise® With Dr. Dave   Print this page

Your Kids and YouTube

"I had no idea that my kids were posting videos online. We don't even own a camera! They were taking videos with their cell phones at parties and posting them online. I am just glad that I found them before their future employer did!"

These are the words of a parent whose teens are regular visitors to a popular new Web site called YouTube.com. An Internet storehouse for homemade videos, YouTube has fast become one of the world's most popular sites, thanks to this parent's kids and millions of others. The appeal of YouTube is as simple as its name: the content on the site can be created by anybody with access to a camera and an Internet connection. The movies on the site range from old TV clips to home videos. Many of them are funny and fascinating. Unfortunately, as in the case of this parent, the clips are sometimes irresponsible and inappropriate.

Sad as it is to say, we should probably expect our kids to act irresponsibly and inappropriately when we give them unmonitored access to some new place. That's as true in the virtual world as it is in the real world, and it's as true for the honors students as it is for the so-called troublemakers. The fact is, kids need limits and guidance, and when they discover a place without these things, it's only natural that they begin to experiment.

A few months ago I wrote about the popular site MySpace.com. In that column I urged parents to keep track of what their kids were doing with their online profiles because of the many reports of cyber-bullying, sexually explicit content, and the celebration of risky behavior. The solution, I said, is to talk to your kids about what is and isn't appropriate, let them know you'll be checking in and then do so.

The same is true with YouTube, except this site may hold even more potential for danger. Because the video format demands a compelling performance, kids are even more likely to engage in outrageous behavior. Often kids will do things for the camera, and for the Internet, that they would never do in everyday life. That's why it's more important than ever to have a conversation with your kids about appropriate behavior in cyberworld.

Recently, we created a MediaWise Parent Guide to help you with this very conversation. Full of useful information and helpful tips, it's available for free at MediaWise.org. Please take a moment and check it out.

Used safely, YouTube could be a great way for your kids to express themselves and meet new people. Here's what one thirteen-year-old says about the site: "I meet a lot of cool people on YouTube. When you like a video you just post a comment on their profile and say what's up. Then you can be friends with them in MySpace too." If we're doing our jobs as parents, there should be nothing alarming about a statement like that. But if we fail to help our kids understand the Internet's pitfalls, YouTube could be a pretty dangerous place for a thirteen-year-old kid.

David Walsh, Ph.D. is the founder of the MediaWise Movement, a program of the National Institute on Media and the Family (www.mediafamily.org). His latest book, Why Do They Act That Way? A Survival Guide to the Adolescent Brain for You and Your Teen, is a national bestseller.

 
 
 
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