Sexual Predators Online: Where Do They Intersect With Adolescents and Young Adults?

Here are some of the results described in “Online Social Networking Patterns Among Adolescents, Young Adults, and Sexual Offenders,” an original research article published in the July issue of AJN:

nearly two-thirds of Internet offenders said they’d initiated the topic of sex in their first chat session; more than half . . . disguised their identity when online; most . . . preferred communicating with teenage girls rather than teenage boys; high school students’ experience with “sexting” . . . differed significantly according to their sex; a small number of students are being threatened and assaulted by people they meet online; avatar sites such as Second Life were used both by students and offenders . .  . .

What’s your own experience? Have a look at the article, and pass along the link if you find it useful, as a parent or nurse. Have you heard any concerns about Internet safety from parents or adolescents you encounter in your own practice or community? What’s your own take on Facebook and privacy, or any other issue raised in this article?—JM, senior editor

Open Your Mind: Brain Pickings and TED (NOT the compression stockings)

By Shawn Kennedy, AJN editor-in-chief

Twitter is a wonderful tool. This morning, as is my habit, I surfed my “favorites” column on my Tweetdeck platform to see what new and interesting things were being tweeted. And I noticed one of particular interest (I’ll get to it shortly) at the twitter page of Brain Pickings, a Web site that focuses on, in their own words,

“ . . . curating interestingness—picking culture’s collective brain for tidbits of stuff that inspires, revolutionizes, or simply makes us think. It’s about innovation and authenticity and all those other things that have become fluff phrases but don’t have to be.”

This twitter stream has alerted me to some unique and wonderful photographs, music, Web sites, charts and graphs, and books. True to its mission statement—and in service of the notion that “creativity is a combinational force”—it offers “ [c]urated bits of culture that will, at the very least, introduce you to new ideas and perspectives and, at their very best, help you think more, laugh more, create more.”

This morning, the tweet in question directed me to a video presentation by Kathryn Schulz, a self-proclaimed “wrongologist,” author of Being Wrong: Adventures in the Margin of Error. In it, she […]

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