Internet Safety Tips for Elementary School Kids

Establishing Internet safety rules early sets your kids up for life. Get the basics.

Advice & Answers


Keep your kids safe online

When your kids start to interact on the Internet -- playing games, watching YouTube videos, socializing in virtual worlds, getting homework help, and searching on Google -- you may feel that you're losing control over your kids' world.

The best way to wrap your arms around your kids' online activities is to spend some time with them while they're visiting their favorite sites. Talk with them about what they like and what they don't.


Why Internet safety matters

Kids today can go online from so many different sources, including video game consoles, iPhones and smart phones, and even handheld gaming devices. Young people are increasingly living their lives online, and their digital devices are some of their favorite toys and tools.

Shouldn’t this new playground be a safe and nice place? With your guidance, it can be. Teaching Internet safety in the elementary years will have lasting rewards for you and your kids.


Internet Safety Basics

Help your kids understand that they should:

  • Never share their names, schools, ages, phone numbers, or addresses;
  • Never send pictures to strangers;
  • Keep passwords private (except to parents);
  • Never open email from strangers – it may contain viruses that can harm a computer; and
  • Immediately tell an adult if something mean or creepy happens.


Strategies for a responsible -- and safer -- online life

  • Visit only age-appropriate sites. Check out the site before your kids visit it. Know what features and what content exist and make sure they’re good for your kids.
  • Search safely. Use safe search settings for young kids or think about applying filtering software to limit inappropriate exposure.
  • Avoid strangers. Tell your kids that people aren’t always who they say they are in cyberspace. Explain that if someone they don’t know talks to them, they shouldn’t respond but should let you know.
  • Be a good cyber citizen! Remind kids that an Internet playground is still a playground and they need to play nicely. A good rule of thumb: If they wouldn’t do something in real life, they shouldn’t do it online. Find out how your children can report mean behavior or unkind content on their favorite sites and teach them how to do it.
  • Online cheating? It’s still cheating and it’s a no-no – pure and simple.
  • Keep the computer in a central place. So you can see what’s going on.
  • Establish expectations and limits about the amount of time your children spend online and what they do. Check out our family media agreement for a helpful place to start.
  • View your own habits carefully. You are their role models.
  • But, mostly, be involved and have fun with them! Keeping kids safe and teaching them how to use digital technology responsibly is all about staying involved. Start by showing interest in the sites they visit and the games they play and your job will be a lot easier when they start exploring these technologies more independently.

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Comments

Jake wells Apr 23, 2013
We should set regular time table for them and make them aware anything in excess is bad. Internet is wonderful resource for knowledge, but sometimes it can be dangerous. *chesstelecom*
2kidsanddogs Feb 14, 2013
I have also told my kids not to text or post anything that they could not read out loud to me or that they would not want me to read.
ppittman717 Jan 13, 2013
You know, I really appreciate the offering of materials to share with parents prior to the launch of an after-school program at the elementary school where I teach. However, in previewing the Internet Safety Tips for Elementary School Students, I found that it wasn't a video I could use in a roomful of parents and my fourth grade students, their children. This was due to the fact that in discussing the posting of suggestive pictures by kids on social network pages, the video includes some pictures so explicit that I can't justify allowing my students to view the video. This is a disappointment to me and I'm hoping that soon, Common Sense media will produce an internet safety video that can be viewed safely by our younger students.
tashabower Nov 4, 2012
Very good information
Stinkysmom22 Aug 8, 2012
Does anyone know how to set up parental controls? I have had discussions with my child but ther are web sites or videos that look like cartoons the kids watch and it's really a trick and winds up being something inappropriate! Please help! :)
singpretty May 26, 2013
Hope you got help! In case you didn't: Start by setting up separate user accounts on computers for each person in house; password protect each. (It may seem like a pain at first, but you'll be glad you did it!) A simple, easy to use, effective, free parental control is Windows Live Family Safety. Download to each computer. Then, on each computer, set it up and "link" WLFS from each computer to the website. Each child will be monitored on each computer. You can set the level of appropriateness, block certain hours of the day/night, get a report of favorite sites, unblock sites as needed, etc. I also use the parental controls that come with my antivirus software; this is password protected as well. YouTube: While on each child's user, open every browser available. Go to YouTube and apply the safe search settings for that browser and that user. It's a pain. But it will give you peace of mind. Then relax: You won't feel like you have to look over their shoulder every moment!
AnnaDavis Jul 24, 2012
Thank you for the tips. My kids use *://search.kidoos.org It looks nice and it's based on Google safe search, but with more filters.
Kid, 8 years old Jun 23, 2012
Alright Everybody Listen To That!!!
CSM Screen name... Jun 11, 2012
This is a great article. In addition to the search safely point is to use a Kids Search engine like *kids-search* or Safe Google, *safe-google* . Both websites offer their own database of filtered websites and keywords along with Strict Safe search filtering powered by Google.