The US
National
Cyber Security Alliance (NCSA) has called on state leaders to work with
schools and colleges to ensure that cyber-security, online safety and ethics
lessons are integrated into every classroom.
The call has been made with support from companies including
CA,
McAfee,
Microsoft
and
Symantec,
along with educational organisations such as the
Consortium
for School Networking and the
State
Education Technology Directors Association.
Recent legislation dubbed the
No
Child Left Behind Act requires students to be technology-literate on
completion of the eighth grade (year nine in the UK), and the NCSA argues that
children should also be taught about the dangers of the web.
The
National
School Boards Association reported that 96 per cent of school districts
claim that at least some of their teachers assign homework requiring internet
use.
But there is still no formal education on how to stay safe, secure and
ethical online, despite the fact that the internet, like the real world, has
threats and dangers which students may come across in the normal course of a
day.
These include communications from identity thieves, online predators and
cyber-bullies.
A recent
University
of Michigan national poll on children's health issues found that adults
ranked 'internet safety' as the seventh most important issue affecting children
today.
"As more and more children and teens grow up in an online world, it is
important that they understand how to behave online," said Ron Teixeira,
executive director of the NCSA.
"Their safety and security depends on whether or not they talk to strangers,
place personal information on social networking sites or secure their family's
computer.
"It is critical that states and schools implement internet safety, security
and ethics lessons into current technology literacy education efforts in order
to protect children from identity theft as well as the nation's online
infrastructure."
The NCSA is proposing cyber-awareness programmes that must incorporate the
'C3 principles' of cyber-ethics, safety and security. These include:
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