Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Are you harming your child by posting photos of them on Facebook?

Over the holiday season, Facebook is inundated with pictures of children getting involved in the family festivitie­s. But Joanne Orlando, a researcher in Technology and Learning at Western Sydney University, suggests parents who post pictures of their chil

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We often express dissatisfa­ction at the ways young people post their lives online. But if we turn the mirror on ourselves, do we as parents actually have the right to make our family photos public? If so, which ones?

Part of the issue is our tendency for over-sharing.

A recent study by Nominet, which handles the UK’s .uk domain name registry, found that parents post nearly 200 photos of their under fives online every year.

This means that a child will feature in around 1,000 online photos before their fifth birthday. We’ve even got to the point where if you don’t upload photos of our baby, others question whether you are a committed parent.

This new norm means that many children will have a powerful digital identity created by someone else.

This process can be likened to the manufactur­ing of celebrity identities, where parents can potentiall­y shape the public persona of their child in any way they want: child genius, disobedien­t, fashionist­a, fussy eater and so on.

How do you think your own mum or dad might shape your online identity? Do you think it would be an accurate portrayal of who you are?

There is also the issue of Likes and comments on those photos. Without realising it, are we choosing to upload posts about our kids that we hope will get the most audience attention? If so, how is this skewing the identity we are shaping for them? The web never forgets We often tell our kids that once something is on the internet it is there forever, and this is a core concern for kids.

Research shows that parents often haven’t considered the potential reach and the longevity of the digital informatio­n that they’re sharing about their child.

Your child won’t have much control over where that home video of her having an embarrassi­ng first singing lesson ends up or who sees it.

And for this generation of kids, the publicisin­g of their lives can start even before they are born when parents broadcast photos to all their friends and their friends’ friends of the antenatal scan.

Parents’ actions are generally not maliciousl­y intended.

In fact, they actually often see they are exposing something personal about their own life in such posts rather than that of their child.

There’s also benefit from such sharing. Posts about your child bed-wetting might help a friend find solutions, or boost their patience for dealing with a similar issue with their own child. Many parents find this community of support important.

Given the relative youth of social media, it’s hard to say exactly how growing up online could affect children’s privacy, safety and security.

But social media has also been around long enough now (Facebook is now 14 years old) that it’s important to seriously consider the issue.

It’s time to question how individual­s (both children and adults) should manage boundaries around sharing personal informatio­n, and how they can control informatio­n that is shared about them.

Posting embarrassi­ng photos of others on Facebook without consent is definitely tricky territory, but what constitute­s embarrassi­ng is slightly different for everyone, which makes this new issue even more of a minefield. Get the kids involved The answer of how to approach this new-found issue might be to listen to what kids have to say about it.

Recent research from the University of Michigan asked children and parents to describe the rules they thought families should follow related to technology.

Adults tend to think of these rules around how much time kids spend on screen, but about three times more children than parents thought there should be rules about what parents share and don’t share on social media.

Many kids said parents should not post anything about them on online without asking them.

Both children and parents considered positive images, events and news more appropriat­e to share than negative ones.

An image of the child playing on the swings at the park is a lot less likely to resurface than a YouTube video of them having a tantrum because their breakfast is not in their favourite bowl.

If you’re a parent looking for advice or sympathy about a behavioura­l problem, then a community approach is still very helpful, just don’t post an image and your child’s name as part of the post.

This will help to limit the searchabil­ity and reach of it.

Asking your children’s consent is also part of the issue and part of the solution.

Asking if your child likes the photos of them and whether you can put it up online can be a very quick and respectful conversati­on. It also sets up a great approach to your kids under- standing digital etiquette.

Parents sharing photos of their kids online isn’t only about digital identity.

It’s also about our obsession with taking photos of our kids, particular­ly when they shine (or don’t shine) in their respective activities.This can make kids feel pressured to perform to help mum and dad get the right snap to share.

What the children really want to see is you taking notice of them and acknowledg­ing that they and their actions are important.

 ??  ?? Over the holiday season, Facebook is inundated with pictures of children getting involved in the family festivitie­s. Pic courtesy Shuttersto­ck/Michal Staneewski
Over the holiday season, Facebook is inundated with pictures of children getting involved in the family festivitie­s. Pic courtesy Shuttersto­ck/Michal Staneewski

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