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Online Safety

Any time students use the Internet at school or at home, filtering inappropriate material becomes an issue. Even with the most expensive filtering programs, a few easy-to-implement tips can help ensure that your students stay safe and view only materials that are appropriate for them.

Protecting Our Students

iSafe, a free Internet safety awareness program created by Congress and supported by local law enforcement officials, can provide educators with materials, ideas, and even speakers on keeping kids safe online.

Yikes! What Do I Do Next?
Teach students what to do if they land on an inappropriate site.

Tell students to hit the Back arrow and notify a teacher immediately if they accidentally land on an inappropriate Web site. If they simply close down the browser, you might have difficulty locating the offensive site and reporting it.

Where Did They Go?
Review student Internet usage.

To review a student's Internet usage, click the History icon ( a clock with a green arrow around it) in the Internet Explorer menu bar. A History pane will open to the left of the browser window. Click the day of the week you want to review and a list of sites accessed that day will appear.

How Do We Collaborate Safely?
Check out free online collaboration tools.

Students can work on classroom projects and use e-mail and online collaboration in a safe environment using the free tools provided by Oracle at Think.com. Schools can sign up students ages 7-14 for e-mail and restrict that e-mail to those inside their own school or to those in a specified address book. A number of other child-safety tools on this site make it a great choice for online collaboration in elementary settings!



Article by Lorrie Jackson
Education World®
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