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Transcript of teens/social media
teens/social media
Allie, Johanna, Katherine, Ruth & Veronica
Teens & Social Media
We are not advocating taking social media away from teenagers. For one thing, it wouldn't be good for them. For another, it wouldn't work.
• 3 out of 4 American teenagers have a profile on a social networking site
o Facebook: over 100 million people under 24o Twitter: almost a quarter of a million users under 24
Teens & Social Media• Social media
• Social media can be a very good thing for teenagers! o Useful networking skillso Opportunity to experiment with their
identities in relative safetyo Form connections with like-minded
individuals all over the worldo Gain familiarity with people and cultures
outside their own narrow social sphereso Chance to express their creativity and
receive feedback and encouragement from their peers
Popular Social Networking sites:
Used For/With
Connecting w/people you know
Connecting creatively w/people you don't know
Connecting globally w/people you may or may not know.
Method
YouTube
Demonstration
Privacy / Security
Trolling / CyberBullying
Hashtag Functionality
Facebook• Alternate/Additional method of
communication with peerso message friends, post photos, links, and
videos, and play gameso schedule events o connect with institutions and brands
• Building Identity: o concerned with appearanceo experimenting with "image"
• Communication: o reinforce existing social networkso not for meeting new people
Privacy & Security• Social media allows for public representation of
yourself that has the potential to be irrevocable and widely circulated
• Safety:o Facebook has different privacy setting for
users under 18o start a discussion with your teen
• Facebook makes this complicated: should be re-visited as settings change (and child ages)
A note on changing your age on Facebook:
Facebook Privacy SettingsUsing a personal account or sharing in a small
group, Allie (and crew) will guide you through setting and modifying Privacy Settings. If you do not have your own Facebook account, you can use the dummy account we set up:
Log-in:[email protected]: iloveunicorns
www.facebook.com
YouTube
• Consumption & Commentary: YouTube enables teens to watch, share and comment on a variety of types of content (but especially music) and connect with other people who enjoy the same content.
• Content Creation: vlogs, fan videos, funny videos of cats, webisodes, homework assignments, recordings of live concerts filmed on someone's cameraphone: all can be put on YouTube for others to see.
Trolling/CyberBullies• Trolling: maintaining a negative attitude in an
online space; posting (and re-posting) rude, offensive or cynical comments without cause; purposefully antagonising other users with the intent of driving a user from a particular online space. Teens need not only to be educated about how to deal with being trolled but also to be taught not to troll!
• CyberBullying: "willful and repeated harm inflicted" through the use of various electronic devices including but not limited to: computers, cell phones and online communities (Patchin and Hinduja 2007).
For Example:
• Twitter is a "micro-blogging" platform: users "tweet" messages of 140 characters or less to their followers
• Tweet text, pictures, videos and links
• Follow celebrities, news sources, or friends from real life
• Words or phrases preceded by # are referred to on Twitter "hash-tags".
• Usernames on Twitter are preceded by the @ symbol, and you will see any public use of your @username.
Twitter, continued.• Concerns about privacy and
cyberbullying also apply
• If you receive abusive @messages, it is possible to block other users but you cannot prevent them from tweeting about you
• "Lock" your twitter: tweets are set to public by default, locking limits tweets to approved followers