News11 mins ago
How old should a child be before they are allowed to use the Internet unsupervised?
13 Answers
With the Child Exloitation and Online Protection Centre (Ceop) targeting children as young as five in its current online safety campaign we thought we'd ask you: at what age a child should be allowed online unsupervised?
Link: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/education/8499356.stm
Link: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/education/8499356.stm
This poll is closed.
Answers:
- 16+ - 14 votes
- 35%
- 12+ - 11 votes
- 28%
- 14+ - 7 votes
- 18%
- 10+ - 4 votes
- 10%
- 18+ - 3 votes
- 8%
- 8+ - 1 vote
- 3%
- 4+ - 0 vote
- 0%
Stats until: 08:41 Thu 21st Nov 2024 (Refreshed every 5 minutes)
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I'd like to say 16+ but it's really not practical these days, especially as a lot of the homework set by the school is internet based, and I work and cannot supervise constantly. My son as now 14 and although not always supervised he does not have his own PC in his room, he uses the one we all access, and I check what he has been up to. So anyway I've gone with 12+, but it also depends on the child, and the kind of relationship you have with them.
Absolutely agree with chelle. It depends on the child and your relationship with them. I have gone with 12 because I can only relate to my own offspring. 16+ is just plain not on. A 'child' of 16 should be adequately informed long before reaching 16 unless there are problems. My goodness, they could be out and about and working or training for the forces at 16. You can't suddenly expect them to change at 16.
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I think it should be up to the discretion of the parents, kids mature at differing levels.
I would say around 14/15. Maybe they should have to pass some sort of 'web-use proficiency test' before they're allowed on unsupervised, so they can learn about certain dangers, what's legal, what aint, 'netiquette' how to deal with getting thrown off sites for copying other peoples' poetry etc. etc.
I would say around 14/15. Maybe they should have to pass some sort of 'web-use proficiency test' before they're allowed on unsupervised, so they can learn about certain dangers, what's legal, what aint, 'netiquette' how to deal with getting thrown off sites for copying other peoples' poetry etc. etc.
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