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Archives for 2015

Archives for 2015

The Pros and Cons of Anonymous Social Media for Young People

January 1, 2015 By Carolyn Jabs

Keeping secrets is part of growing up. Deciding what you’ll tell people about yourself—and others—is one way children develop an understanding of privacy and trust.

With Facebook and other forms of public social media, nothing is secret. Even young children now know that comments or photos become part of a person’s “permanent record.” And that’s one reason many teens are switching to anonymous apps with names like Whisper, Secret, Yik Yak, Street Chat and FessApp.

With anonymous apps, teens can let off steam without worrying about repercussions. They confess crushes and mistakes, make edgy jokes, laugh over embarrassing moments, and divulge sensitive information. Some people also feel free to open up about serious problems–abusive relationships, conflicts with friends and family, concerns about mental and physical health, and even self-destructive behaviors such as anorexia, cutting, and suicidal thoughts.

That kind of communication is very different from more public forms of social media where everyone puts their best food forward all the time. Living in a glass house can be boring, exhausting, and even lonely because no one is spontaneous or even honest. At their best, anonymous apps are an opportunity for young people to explore the edges of who they are and find out that their problems are not unique.

Of course, anonymity also has a well-documented dark side. Many people do things they wouldn’t otherwise do when they can’t be held accountable. On anonymous sites, people slander and threaten other people. They spread cruel rumors and solicit sex. Given the potential for serious problems, it’s easy for parents to overreact.

That won’t help. Without understanding the allure of anonymous social media, parents can’t set effective limits. Although every anonymous app is a little different, parents quickly gain insight into the appeal of no-name social media by browsing whisper.sh, a site where “whispers” are shared, classified, rated, and assembled into lists. Even a cursory look reveals whispers that are witty and confessional, harmless fun, and seriously disturbing. Taken together, they provide a remarkable window into the anxieties, preoccupations, embarrassments, and fears of other people– a collage that’s compelling for teens trying to figure out how they fit into the world.

Armed with a basic understanding of anonymous social media, parents are in a better position to talk to teens. Here are questions worth asking:

What apps are you using?

Find out what apps your child has installed. Just as important, find out what apps your child’s friends are using. Many kids feel they need to have a particular app simply to keep track of what’s being said by others.

Read Next | Teaching Teens about News Bias and How to Find Reliable News Sources

How are apps being used?

Some teens use anonymous apps wisely—posting funny messages or even supporting people who seem to be having a tough time. Other kids are seduced by the popularity contest. In order to get more “likes,” they push the envelope with posts that are increasingly outrageous, sexual, or cruel. Children need to hear from you that you expect them to live up to their values in private as well as public settings.

What’s the appeal of anonymity?

Help your child think through the pros and cons of anonymity. How does it influence what people post? Be sure your child understands that privacy policies for websites often change. Even though anonymity is likely with these apps, it’s never guaranteed. Also police can and do track down people who break the law by making threats or posting sexual photos of minors.

Read Next | I Caught My Child Watching Inappropriate Videos

What’s the role of GPS?

Many popular anonymous apps depend upon the location service built into every smart phone. YikYak, for example, was designed by college students so people on the same campus could share random messages. In high schools, the program has been used for bullying, bashing teachers, and even bomb threats. Yik Yak erected “geofences” that are supposed to make the program off limits for many public schools but, of course, that doesn’t stop students from accessing the program in other settings. If sites like this are causing problems at your child’s school, consider disabling the GPS feature on the phone.

Which sites should be off-limits?

Make it clear that you don’t want your child to use “random chat apps” such as Omegle, Chatrandom, and Tiny Chat. These are adult apps which make it all too easy for teens to connect with strangers. You may also want to steer your child away from sites that have developed a reputation for bullying. Ask.fm, for example, is notorious for cruel questions such as “why are you fat?” or even “why don’t you kill yourself?”

Even sites that try to monitor and remove offensive posts won’t be successful all the time, so teens who use anonymous apps are likely to encounter material that is confusing or even upsetting. Opening up candid conversation about these apps defuses their power. Teens may not tell their parents everything, but they should have confidence that, when they are burdened by a secret, the best people to confide in are still Mom and Dad.

Carolyn Jabs, M.A., raised three computer savvy kids including one with special needs. She has been writing Growing Up Online for ten years and is working on a book about constructive responses to conflict. Visit her site to read other columns.

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Filed Under: Positive Parenting, Health and Safety

Teddy Atlas III Blazing His Own Trail in NFL

January 10, 2015 By Joe LoVerde

January 2015. The little boy and his dad crossed the street from their Sunnyside home nearly every afternoon and headed for the park, the dad toting a large duffle bag filled with all types of sports equipment.

They’d play baseball, football, basketball and even lace on boxing gloves and spar a bit. And when they were done playing together, other kids would join in, or the dad would leave and the boy played with friends until his mom called out from their fourth-floor apartment window: “Teddy, it’s dinner time.”

It was a ritual except when the dad was away on business— and mom took over.

“I was surprised the first time my mom stepped in,” said Teddy Atlas III, the son of famous boxing trainer Teddy Atlas Jr. and Elaine Atlas. “But she would pitch to us, run the bases.”

Pretty cool mom.

In the years that followed, Atlas spent a lot of time around pro sports, “in the gym, at major sporting events and meeting professional athletes” through his dad’s work in boxing.

It’s not surprising, then, that Teddy Atlas III would wind up with a career in sports. At 29, he’s the scouting coordinator for the Oakland Raiders of the National Football League and loving every minute of it.

“I get paid to watch football for a living,” Atlas said.

It’s a lot more involved than that, but more on that later.

Atlas grew up like a lot of kids from local sports families. He played in the Staten Island Boys Football League, the East Shore Little League, the Mid-Island Babe Ruth League and CYO basketball for St. Teresa’s, and wound up on the football, basketball, and baseball teams at St. Peter’s High School.

Read Next | Little League Returns For Young Baseball Players In Staten Island

Naturally, Atlas also boxed, trained by his dad. He later boxed a bit at Northeastern University in Boston, where he graduated with a degree in economics. Having interned with the Jets when Eric Mangini was head coach, Atlas found himself with two job offers after graduation: one with an accounting firm and the other in football operations with the Cleveland Browns, where Mangini wound up after being fired by the Jets in December 2008.

It was no contest.

“Without hesitation,” he said, “I took the job with the Browns.”

The hours with the Browns were long; the tasks — like being in charge of locker room music, Gatorade inventory, transportation — were many. But he stayed late on his own time and begged the player personnel guys for more stuff to do. It was a great education, and in 2010 the Browns’ president promoted him to that department.

But Mangini was fired after that season and his whole staff was let go. So Atlas took a pile of resumes to the college Senior Bowl in Mobile, Alabama, and gave them out to every general manager and head coach in attendance. Two weeks later the Raiders called him, and Atlas moved to Oakland, where he’s been for four seasons.

In 2013, he was promoted to Raiders scouting coordinator. His responsibilities run the gamut, from coordinating prospects’ evaluations to evaluating that talent himself; from talking to agents of potential free-agent players and working them out. He also arranges the advance scouting reports of teams the Raiders will play each week.

“He is a great worker,” Raiders General Manager Reggie McKenzie told The Press Democrat newspaper in California, “and he understands football. And he understands what needs be done. No job is too big for him. Those are the kind of guys you need to have around your team.”

Atlas loves all of it. “It doesn’t feel like a job a lot of days,” he said. “I get to watch guys I helped draft. I have a say.”

He credits his parents for preparing him well for the challenges and responsibilities of the job, such as “seeing what my father went through to get to the top of his profession, the hard work, long hours and sacrifices he made. And the sacrifices my mother made, too,” he said.

He also gives credit to Mangini, who taught him “how to grind,” he said.

Atlas, who bears a strong resemblance to his dad, does miss his family — his parents, who now live on Todt Hill, and older sister Nicole, an attorney and part-time boxing judge — and friends on the Island, but is comforted by his parents’ visits and the arrival of fiancée Lana Guzik, a Brooklyn girl, who joined him in Alameda, California.

He laments having missed the last six Dr. Theodore A. Atlas Foundation dinners, which honors his grandfather, is run by his dad, brings celebrities to Staten Island, and raises thousands for worthy causes.

Read Next | Should You Let Your Child Take The Field?

And in those rare times the job gets him down, Atlas has a good fall- back plan.

“I think to myself that I’m not as smart as the other guys; that I never played football on this level,” Atlas said. “But I’m lucky to have the relationship I have with my father. He can motivate anybody.”

He also laments missing his sister’s law school graduation and friends’ weddings in order to chase his dream. “I’ve sacrificed so much. I have to make it.”

Make what, exactly? Well, there are 32 NFL football general managers in the world.

Atlas wants to be one of them.

Joe LoVerde has been coaching youth sports on Staten Island for nearly 40 years. He’s also a longtime newspaper editor and sportswriter.

Related information:

More Good Sports Columns

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Filed Under: Family Fun Tagged With: sports

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