YouTube Parent Resources
A new survey from KidSay reveals YouTube is the number one website amongst “tweens” (ages eight to eleven), despite the policy that you must be 13 or older to create an account...
Looking at teens' social networks may reveal how their brains work, says University of Pennsylvania neuroscience researchers. In a commentary on the Scientific American blog, Emily Falk, director of the Penn Communication Neuroscience Lab, and Michael Platt, director of the Wharton Neuroscience Initiative, note that by better understanding how teens make connections they can learn more about how to engage teens. For example, teens who are “information brokers,” having a knack for connecting people who wouldn’t otherwise know each other, come up with better solutions to problems, potentially because they are exposed to more diverse perspectives.