Technology Tips for Parents

FCPS wants to help you support your child in the online world. If your student has access to an internet-enabled device at home, please consider exploring the following tips and resources!

Educate yourself and your children.    

Digital citizenship is a learning process and your child will need sustained support from parents and teachers. Visit bit.ly/fairfaxdigcit for a fun and interactive parent-child course that can help your family start conversations about navigating the online world. Learn about students  G Suite for Education accounts.  Visit the FCPS G Suite for Education page to learn more.

 Establish rules and expectations.

Have you thought about the rules you want to establish with your child for setting up accounts and the privacy settings you expect your child to use? What are your expectations and how will you monitor your child’s online activities?  Not sure where to start? Check out Common Sense Media

 Help your child monitor and manage their screen time.

It’s easy for our students to spend hours on a device. Use these guidelines and strategies to help your children learn to monitor and manage their screen time. 

Discuss privacy settings and accounts.

Teach your child to protect their personal information and model the use of privacy settings. Discuss why these settings are important and teach them how to make privacy setting choices for every app and service they use. This resource can help you get started with privacy and parental settings for devices, apps, websites, and games.

Give your child action steps.

Discuss potential situations that may arise before they happen and give your child action steps. Do they know what they can do if cyberbullied, harassed, or if someone sends them something they don’t want to see? Every difficult situation is an opportunity to help prepare them for life beyond your home. These short parent advice videos, which can be filtered by topic and age, can help you identify action steps you can share with your child.  

Teach your child to assess risks and make good choices.

Online communication is public and permanent. Talk with your children regularly and remind them that what they do online can impact future opportunities. Their online reputation can also affect their relationships in the face to face world.