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Shelly Leachman
For years Shelly Leachman's mom encouraged her to go into education; she chose to write about it instead. Since 2006 Shelly has been juggling coverage of 10 school districts and two colleges for the Daily Breeze, where she is the resident office apple addict. Contact her at: dailybreeze.com

Toni Sciacqua
Toni Sciacqua is the managing editor at the Daily Breeze, where she has worked since 1998. Among other things, she's in charge of nagging reporters to update their blogs, but she helps them out by posting random tidbits from outside sources. She has two small children who will one day attend North Torrance schools.


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After-school special: Most parents say they talk to their kids about internet dangers

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — The vast majority of American parents talk to their children about how to be safe and ethical on the Internet, according to a survey published today.
Researchers for San Francisco-based nonprofit Common Sense Media and Washington-based education foundation Cable in the Classroom found that 85 percent of parents and legal guardians of children who go online say they have talked to their child in the past year about how to behave on the Internet.
More than 93 percent say they have taken action to make sure the Web sites their children visit meets parental standards, according to the poll, conducted by Harris Interactive. Results were based on phone interviews in mid-August with 411 parents of 6- to 18-year-olds whose kids were online.

Common Sense Media CEO James Steyer said the results may mollify parents and educators alarmed by a 2005 survey by the Kaiser Family Foundation, which found that on average American kids between 8 and 18 spend 6.5 hours a day absorbed in media. That comes to 45 hours a week watching TV
or videos, playing with computers or listening to digital music — more than a full time job.
“The results suggest that most parents balance the Web’s dangers and benefits, they talk to their kids about the issues they meet, and work to make the Web a helpful tool,” Steyer said.
According to the new survey, only one in three parents said their children spent too much time online. About one in four parents worried that kids weren’t exercising or enjoying the outdoors because they were preoccupied with the Internet, and one in five said the Internet distracted kids from schoolwork. Although four out of five parents said the Internet helped their kids in school, nearly three out of four acknowledged that they’ve had “issues” with their children’s online activities.
Parents said the most troubling issues were excessive exposure to advertising or commercialism online; exposure to coarse language, or sexual or violent content online; and exposure to misleading or bad information online.

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