When it airs: Overnight schedule |
Professional Development. 60 minutes.
Frontline episode #2606.
FRONTLINE takes viewers inside the private worlds that kids are creating
online, raising important questions about how the Internet is transforming
the experience of adolescence. At school, teachers are trying to figure out
how to reach a generation that no longer reads books or newspapers. Fear of
online predators has led teachers and parents to focus primarily on keeping
kids safe online. But many young people think these fears are misplaced.
Online media has also intensified the social dimensions of adolescence as
teens create and play with identities on sites like MySpace and Facebook and
encounter intense peer pressure in a variety of virtual worlds. Parents are
confused about how to respond to the increasingly private worlds inhabited
by their children, lacking an understanding of both the creative potential
and the genuine risks of this new dimension of our cultural environment.
About the Resources found on the program's web site:
FRONTLINE had developed materials for teachers, parents and kids to
accompany Growing Up Online. These resources include downloadable viewing
guides for parent and for teachers that includes a seven-part discussion
question section, lesson plans for the classroom, resources for building
parent-teen online engagement, and a Cyberquiz: "What Kind of Cyber Guide
are You?" that explores parents' media management styles.