On the 30th July, 2006 Minister for Education and Science Mary Hanafin
launched a survey on children’s habit and the internet. She
described the findings of the survey as very worrying. “This
survey contains a wealth of information about how our young people
are using all forms of modern technology to access the internet
and communicate through it. Worryingly though, it seems very often
that parents are not fully aware of the hidden dangers that are
part the emergence of these new technologies. The survey shows that
children have a huge exposure to the internet. This is very positive
from a learning and educational point of view, but parents must
realise that allowing children unregulated access to chat rooms
and other social networks can have very dangerous consequences.”
Among the main findings of the survey, conducted by the National
Centre for Technology in Education site Webwise are:
• All children use
PCs, almost 40% claim to own their own PC. • 96% have
used the Internet. • A quarter of the children surveyed
said they used the internet at home everyday. 52% are using it at
least once a week at school. • One in ten use instant
messaging (MSN, ICQ, Google Chat, Skype etc.) at home everyday or
almost everyday. • There is increasing access to the
Internet through different devices such as personal computers, laptops,
mobile phones and game consoles. • One in fifteen of
the children surveyed had met in real life someone that they first
met on the Internet. This marks an increase from one in twenty-two
in 2003. Most reported very positive experiences. • 11%
of the 9 to 16-year-olds surveyed who met up with someone that they
first met online said that the other person tried to physically
hurt them. Worryingly, in all the cases of physical and verbal abuse
reported in the survey the children said that the person who introduced
themselves to them on the Internet as a child, turned out to be
an adult. • 27% said they met someone new on the Internet
who asked for information like their photo, phone number, street
address, or the school you attend. This is an increase from 19%
in 2003. • Over 50% said that their parents spoke with
them very rarely or not at all about what they did on the internet.
Minister Hanafin said “all
young people need to be very cautious about the level of personal
details and images which they upload onto their web pages. They
should be particularly careful about what they reveal about themselves
when chatting online with people they have only met online as this
information can be used to identify or locate them.
The findings are a valuable resource for parents, educators, and
industry as we strive to actively empower our children to be autonomous
and responsible Internet users for life” said Minister Hanafin.