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![]() | Cyberbullying and Cyberthreats: Responding to the Challenge of Online Social Aggression, Threats, and Distress by Nancy E. Willard, Karen Steiner (Editor) ISBN-10: 9780878225378 ISBN-10: 0-87822-537-4 ISBN-13: 9780878225378 ISBN-13: 978-0-87822-537-8 Perfect Paperback 2007-01-18 Research Press Find Lowest Price | |
Editorials | ||
Product Description Online communications can be cruel and vicious. They take place 24/7. Damaging text and images can be widely disseminated and impossible to fully remove. There are emerging reports of youth suicide, violence, and abduction related to cyberbullying and cyberthreats. In this book,the author provides school counselors, administrators, teachers and parents with cutting-edge information on how to prevent and respond to cyberbullying and cyberthreats. It covers challenging issues that occur as students embrace the Internet and other digital technologies such as: *Sending offensive, harassing messages *dissing someone or spreading nasty rumors online *Disclosing someone's intimate personal information *Breaking into someone's e-mail account and sending damaging messages under that person's name *Excluding someone from an online group *Using the Internet to intimidate The book includes detailed guidelines for managing in-school use of the Internet and personal devices, including cell phones. Appendices contain reproducible assessment and program forms, as well as parent and student handouts. | ||
Reviews | ||
cyberbullying and cyberthreats Willard spelled out clearly the nuiances of cyberbullying and cyberthreats in her book, which addresses the real-life online risks students face as they blindly roam the world of Internet and other digital technologies.Cyberbullying and Cyberthreats: Responding to the Challenge of Online Social Aggression, Threats and Distress | ||
A important book for parents and educators [This review first appeared in my column in the July-August issue of The National Psychologist.} National research studies have found that children and teenagers spend six hours and 21 minutes per day, nearly 45 hours per week, using digital media including television, the Internet, music and video games. A nationwide Kaiser Family Foundation study discovered that if you take into consideration that most kids multitask, the actual media diet is an astounding eight hours and 33 minutes per day or 60 hours per week. With children and adolescents spending more hours using media than they spend sleeping, eating or going to school, parents are becoming increasingly concerned. Nancy Willard, an educator, lawyer and expert on cyberbullying has written a fascinating book entitled Cyber-Safe Kids, Cyber-Savvy Teens: Helping Young People Learn to Use the Internet Safely and Responsibly (Jossey-Bass, 2007). Nancy's approach is to provide parents and educators valuable information about online risks and how to keep children and teens safe in cyberspace. Covering such issues as cyberbullying, violent video games, online pornography, gambling, Internet addiction, privacy and social networking, this book is a comprehensive overview of the darker side of technology. However, unlike television shows like To Catch a Predator, it does not simply accentuate the negatives, but gives parents an array of strategies for helping their children avoid pitfalls or deal with problems when they arise. Nancy's work can also be found at the Center for Safe and Responsible Internet Use (www.csriu.org). [Postscript: Nancy Willard's book is a must read for any parent of a Net Generation child. It is too easy to believe that cyberbullying will never happen to your tween or teen. Sadly, that is not the likely case. Buy this book. Read it and share it with your children. That way, everyone wins.] | ||
don't be over-restrained in your usage Willard addresses something of concern to educators and parents, who might be worried about kids being menaced via a computer network. Which these days essentially means the Internet, through myriad modalities like Instant Messaging, email, Internet Relay Chat etc. Nor is the concern necessarily limited to young users. Adults too might encounter many of the same problems. Certainly, there have been well publicised cases of stalking and physical accosting, initiated over the net. So Willard's text should be taken seriously. But don't go overboard, worrying that the net is full of stalkers or creeps. Most users, whatever their ages, have perfectly ok experiences. While you can perform some or most of the precautions described in the text, try not to let a fear of dangers inhibit you from pursuing your interests. | ||