youth and blogging
I talked to Elin Stueland from Barnevakten yesterday. Barnevakten works with increasing the knowledge about children and media, especially among parents. They've recieved several questions from (worried) parents about children and blogging. Which is why I was contacted for an interview. First of all, I don't have the impression children blog a lot. I've hardly seen any bloggers younger than 14-15. At least I could say a few things about youth and blogging based on the things my informants have told me. The black/white summary of the interview: what's good and what's bad about adolescents writing about their lives and thoughts in more or less public spaces? I struggled somewhat when we came to the bad things about blogging. Is it not a problem that some of my informants might be a little too open when they write about their lives and their feelings? Especially if they don't bother to restrict diary-access to registered friends only? What's too open? I'm not too personal myself. I deleted a whole paragraph from the tarnation-entry, because I thought it was too disclosing.
A minority of my informants have told their parents about their online diary. Some of them don't mind revealing stuff publicly, but they still don't want their parents to know. I found it rather challenging to take a parents' perspective. I'm usually focused on seeing things through the eyes of my informants.