Sydney Morning Herald: We have been inundated with a massive wave of information since the Delta outbreak . We are information-exhausted and now look to news that provides easy detail and convincingly simple solutions. Hello misinformation!
Sydney Morning Herald: We have been inundated with a massive wave of information since the Delta outbreak . We are information-exhausted and now look to news that provides easy detail and convincingly simple solutions. Hello misinformation!
Womens’ Health Magazine: “Orlando doesn’t support digital detoxes. Instead, she suggests carefully curating what your devices offer you.”
Daily Telegraph UK: As referrals to game addiction clinics are on the rise, we explore why lockdown caused an uptick in gaming and when you should hit pause
Washington Post: Should children have the right to have what they posted or others posted of them erased once they become adults. Should they have the right to have their ‘childhood’ online identity forgotten?
ABC: Last year the shift to online learning changed schools. As we head into a new school year, the question is where to now.
Sydney Morning Herald: We parent the whole child, not just the offline part. It’s time for a new attitude around how we guide our kids online.
Daily Telegraph: Want to give your child their first smartphone but not sure they’re ready for it. Here’s the pros and cons of giving a smartwatch first.
Sydney Morning Herald: I was asked my thoughts on a footy player in hot water with a n explicit video emerging of him. My response is that its not just a cautionary tale for the famous, exploitative video is rife on the internet, and all of us can be swept up in it, and victimised by it.
News24: The majority of young people now share lots of things online that many adults question and feel uncomfortable about. Heres why they feel free to share so much.
The Conversation: Every time a child goes online they potentially enter an environment of online celebrity bashing, judgemental knee-jerk reactions & toxic negativity. It may not be targeting them but as bystanders it normalises ‘hate”.