Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://ir.mu.ac.ke:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/847
Title: Parental Regulation Of Children Exposure To Internet At An Upmarket Residential Area In Nairobi County
Authors: KITI EVA MMBONE
Keywords: PARENTAL REGULATION
Issue Date: 12-Jan-2017
Publisher: MOI UNIVERSITY
Abstract: The internet has the prospective to offer children and youths a wide collection of opportunities to learn, to develop different skills, to be in touch with friends and for entertainment purpose. At the same time, the Internet also offers new risks including Internet addiction, cyber bullying and exposure to inappropriate content such as pornography. Technology has opened ways for paedophiles to contact children through social networks, chatrooms or even on their mobile phones to begin conversations that lure them to join indecent forums on the internet. This study sought to investigate parents’ awareness of risks associated to children’s exposure to internet and the strategies that they use to regulate children’s use of internet. The study took place at an up market residential area in Nairobi, Kenya. The study adopted a mixed approach involving quantitative and qualitative techniques. A survey involving 200 families was conducted to explore parental awareness of risks associated with children’s internet access. Thereafter, six focus group discussions were conducted with families selected through purposive sampling technique from those who had participated in the survey. Focus group discussions aimed to understand the everyday practices in children’s exposure to internet and the experiences of parents in attempting to regulate what children access. Findings of the study suggest that even though majority of the parents knew the kind of danger that their children were exposed to online, there was a general lack of knowledge on how to determine relevant content for their children, and how to regulate their access to internet. Parents experienced challenges regulating younger children’s exposure to internet in situations where their older siblings had internet-enabled mobile devices. It was also established that children had adopted strategies that would make it difficult for parents to monitor what they were accessing on the internet. Some parents, however, indicated that they regularly guide and advise their children on what was appropriate/not appropriate in the internet. The study recommends that parents be educated on the need and the strategies of regulating their children’s access to internet.
URI: http://ir.mu.ac.ke:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/847
Appears in Collections:School of Human Resource Development

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