1 / 30

Social Media

Social Media. Building bridges between parents and kids with social media. August 29, 2013 By David S. Peck. What is Social Media?. Social Media Revolution 2013. Please pause the video at this point and follow this link to watch the YouTube video that was shown during the seminar:

Download Presentation

Social Media

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Social Media Building bridges between parents and kids with social media August 29, 2013 By David S. Peck

  2. What is Social Media? Social Media Revolution 2013

  3. Please pause the video at this point and follow this link to watch the YouTube video that was shown during the seminar: • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TXD-Uqx6_Wk

  4. Every two days more content is created and loaded to the Internet than was created through 2003 (Eric Schmidt, Exec. Chairman, Google) • 94% of Americans 16+ own a cell phone, and 54% own a smartphone with data and text access (Nielson, 2013) • 97% of American teenagers own a cell phone, texting an average of 88x a day (Pew Internet, 2013) • Google and YouTube are the top two search engines in the world • 99% of all teenage males have seen some form of pornography on the Internet (Youth Specialties, 2012)

  5. “We are over-committed and under connected” Dr. Jim Burns

  6. “We are over-committed and under connected” Dr. Jim Burns

  7. What we will cover -- • An overview of social media • What’s new? • What’s our role? • Questions?

  8. An overview of social media Social Media is an umbrella term, referring to all of the activities coming together in a medium using one or more senses of sight, sound, and motion to create visual displays, picture-sharing opportunities, collective intelligence, connection points through conversations, postings, text with pictures, and video.

  9. Just the facts: (2013) Facebook – 1 billion users Twitter – 150 million users LinkedIn – 161 million members YouTube -- 4 billion daily views Instagram – 575 likes a second

  10. What’s new?

  11. What’s most used with teenagers?

  12. Sites of concern…

  13. What’s our role?

  14. What’s our role? Deuteronomy 6:4-9 “The Shema” (Shayma) Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength. These commandments that I give you today are to be on your hearts. Impress them on your children. Talk about them when you sit at home and when you walk along the road and when you get up. Tie them, bind them, write them…use social media to communicate God’s truth (my abbreviation).

  15. What’s our role? Provide a healthy environment by – 1. Modeling screen and phone use (home, car, etc.) 9 O’clock– on the dock Family time, meal times = no screens Healthy downtime for non-screen time activities (Sunday, school, etc.)

  16. Blind Inattentiveness

  17. Please pause the video at this point and follow this link to watch the YouTube video that was shown during the seminar: • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ahg6qcgoay4

  18. What’s our role? Provide healthy boundaries by – 2. Setting parameters for screens (teenagers need 9-11 hours a night) Physical Emotional parent controls for cell phones Non-screen time during homework and school work Limited social media time – encourage F2F

  19. What’s our role? Parent controls: block picture messaging Block unknown numbers Limit time of text and calls Filter web browsing GPS tracking

  20. What’s our role? Provide a healthy, balanced home environment by – 3. Praying, and playing as a family. Be prayerful that the Holy Spirit would guide and direct you and your kids – We often tell them that we pray for a guilty conscience (for them) Dreena and I frequently pray with our kids F2F, but also on text Look for opportunities to trust them – catch them doing good things (the daily bible verse– forwarded to 8-10 contacts each day) Be engaged, and aware – keywords can be dangerous – “Whitehouse, fail” Solicit family and friends to “follow” and “friend”

  21. Example: Peck family guidelines and boundaries – • Cell phones – earned with a 3.5+ during their 7th grade year – have to maintain a 3.0 to keep the phone • Phone on the dock at 9:00 – even though phone doesn’t turn off until 9:30 • Back to school– September/ October no TV, then no weekday TV thereafter • Facebook – 16+ years of age, similar to emotional development of dating • No computers or TV’s in bedrooms (unless studying at a desk) • Images and words matter – the mom test– would mom approve?

  22. Other things: • Routers to manage home Wi-Fi time and access • XXXChurch.com for websites and other screens • Regularly check histories and ask questions • Check song lyrics and delete songs with suggestive or explicit lyrics • Time limits – some new technologies (Kindle) Homework time= playtime • Parents need to have social media sites they allow their kids to have – and have your kids set it up and teach you • Create a family Facebook page

  23. Questions?

More Related