Shatterheart wrote:If parents are reading kids emails, I think they are going way to far. While I agree with respecting your parents....Parents should also give kids some privacy with things. Unless of course you want your kids to get better at hiding things from you. Most teens will not want there parents reading personal things they tell there friends. Then again, most parents have long sence forgotten what its like to be a teen.
I agree with you to a a point, but it's not black & white, either. Parents should have access to their teens' email, but not necessarily read it. The accountability is what's needed. I randomly check my daughter's email account (and she knows I do) to see WHO'S emailing her, that's all. I don't open her emails...but I definitely check the sources. The accountability is there, and that's what's important. Because she's open to that kind of accountability, she's able to have a lot more freedom than she would.
If she received a snail-mail letter from someone I didn't know, I'd certainly get involved in
some way. The depth of involvement would depend upon her secrecy, and she happens to be very open, which has saved her (and us) a lot of grief. My teenaged daughter shouldn't be corresponding
privately with people she doesn't know, and the internet is ripe for that. Obviously, there will be times when she will have to, for example in private messaging on this forum.
Because the internet provides the opportunity for people to pretend that they're someone else, and sometimes with ill intent, "relationships" here are quite different than those offline. Once trust is established, it's not long before personal information starts to flow. The information flows through email, IMs, PMs, and sometimes forums (although teens tend to be more careful there). That's where the danger comes in, and why parents have to be pro-active in keeping their teens safe as they learn to use good judgment. That protection is going to have to come in the form of what would otherwise be considered an invasion of privacy. When there's a chance that a 40-year-old pedophile will pretend to be a teenaged boy so he can correspond with my daughter and win her trust, you can bet I'll be lurking in the shadows keeping an eye on things.
Before the internet, involved parents knew who their teens hung out with, who their friends were, and often who their families were. The internet has removed those safety nets. It's gravely important for parents to know who's emailing/PMing their teen, as well as who's IMing them. They should also stay up to date on the forums their teens frequent, to see what kind of people their teen is "hanging out with." One of the bonuses of this kind of involvement is that some online relationships CAN be taken offline and be allowed to develop further, in a safe manner, with the parents doing the initial legwork and research to make sure that everything's on the up-and-up. My husband, daughter & I have all been blessed by wonderful offline friendships that started online. But we also had some very frightening experiences early on, when we were a little too trusting.
As for LiveJournals, Xangas, and blogs...those aren't technically diaries, because they're not private..they're about as public as putting your own TV show on the air!! Two of the teens I minister to have all their private info on their blogs...with pictures of them as well! Their age, what high school they go to, what extracurriculars they're involved in, etc.. One of these young women is usually incredibly mature and honorable, a Christian girl of high integrity, a leader among our young people.
Of course her parents should trust her...she's an incredible young woman. But she's now shared
all the info needed for someone with ill intent to track her down. If they read her blog, they'd know it, and would've talked to her about it and had her change it.
As for privacy, my daughter has always been allowed to lock her door and keep us out of her room completely, as well as keep all her private/personal writing away from our eyes, because she has consistently shown herself to be trustworthy in all the other areas of her life. If I didn't know what was going on in all those areas, I wouldn't know I could trust her. Her willingness to be held accountable has given us the freedom to give her more freedom. We never ever go in her room without permission, or go through her things, because she's so open and trustworthy in all the "communication areas" of her life. She goes in her bedroom to talk on the phone, and is allowed absolute privacy. Not all teens should be entitled to that, though.
I know the subject of privacy for teens is a touchy subject with people, and it always has been, even before the internet. All-in-all, parents are held directly responsible for the protection & raising of their children, and the internet has made that tremendously difficult. It's a new world, with new rules, and we're all making our way through it the best we can. I praise God for giving me a daughter who understands, and who says she'll be the same way with her children. I'm truly, truly blessed by her. She's awesome.