Skip to main content
  • For Parents
  • For Educators
  • For Advocates
  • Sign in
  • Donate
  • Digital Citizenship
    • Our Curriculum
      • About Digital Citizenship
      • Lesson Plans
      • Lesson Plans (U.K.)
      • Quick Activities (Grades K–5)
      • Quick Activities (Grades 6–12)
      • Digital Life Dilemmas
    • Resources
      • SEL in Digital Life Resource Center
      • Implementation Guide
      • Toolkits by Topic
      • Videos
      • Posters
      • Virtual Classroom Backgrounds
    • Student Games
      • NEW! Digital Connections (Grades 6–8)
      • Digital Compass™ (Grades 6–8)
      • Digital Passport™ (Grades 3–5)
      • Social Media TestDrive (Grades 6–8)
  • Apps and Websites for Learning
    • Find an App or Website
      • All Apps and Websites
      • Top Picks Lists
    • Our Picks
      • Common Sense Selections
      • "Best of" Articles
    • Privacy Program
      • About the Privacy Program
      • Privacy Evaluations
      • Privacy Articles
      • Privacy Direct (Free download)
  • Professional Development
    • col1
      • All Events and Training
      • Digital Citizenship Teacher Training
      • Student Privacy Teacher Training
      • Advice Articles
      • Common Sense Recognized Educators
      • Common Sense Education Ambassadors
  • Family Resources
    • Share with Families
      • Family Engagement Toolkit
      • Digital Citizenship Resources for Families
      • Family Media Agreement
      • Common Sense Media Tips by Text
    • Workshop Materials
      • Workshops for Families with Kids Age 0–8
      • Workshops for Middle and High School Families
      • Pre-Recorded Parent Presentations
  • Get Our Newsletter
  • Back-to-School
  • Donate
Grades 6–12 Family Tips

Help Kids Make Friends and Interact Safely Online

So much of kids' social lives happens online. Whether they're texting with their study group, flirting on social media, or voice-chatting on game platforms, middle and high schoolers can learn to communicate in safe and healthy ways. These skills will help kids -- and the people they're communicating with -- have positive experiences online.

Check out these 4 tips

Give them the right words.

Kids learn about appropriate verbal and physical communication from watching you. But online conversations can be invisible. Occasionally, narrate as you're writing texts or social media comments when your kids are in earshot.

Learn about their worlds.

Tweens and teens have unique communication styles -- especially online. As much as possible, keep an eye on what they're saying and doing online to understand the norm in their worlds. Don't police everything they say, but keep an ear out for aggressive trash-talking, hate speech, rude images, or anything hurtful. If you see stuff that crosses the line, speak up. Kids need to understand that their words have consequences.

Empathize with the pressure to overshare.

Tweens and teens might feel pushed into sharing a sexy photo for different reasons: a dare, fear of damaging a relationship, or just because "everyone else is doing it." But this one is nonnegotiable. Tell them that you understand how bad it can feel to disappoint a friend. Then help them imagine how much worse it would feel if a private picture were shared with their whole school.

Develop their instincts.

Help kids learn to trust their guts so they can suss out creepy, risky, or otherwise unsafe online situations. Playact a few scenarios: What if someone asks to take a conversation private? What if someone asks for your phone number? What if someone invites you to a private chat room? Be aware that some kids (even "good" kids) will explore iffy stuff online out of curiosity. But the minute they feel uncomfortable, they need to shut things down.

Print PDF

Looking for other languages? See the Spanish version (ver en español) or download the multilingual PDF bundle to get these tips in Arabic, Chinese, Farsi, Korean, Russian, Tagalog, Urdu, and Vietnamese.

Get more family engagement resources

© Common Sense Media 2018. Lessons are shareable with attribution for noncommercial use only. No remixing permitted. View detailed license information at creativecommons.org.

Common Sense is the nation's leading nonprofit organization dedicated to improving the lives of all kids and families by providing the trustworthy information, education, and independent voice they need to thrive in the 21st century.

We're a nonprofit. Support our work

  • Learn More
    • Column 1
      • About Us
      • Diversity & Inclusion
      • Meet Our Team
      • Board of Directors
      • Board of Advisors
      • Our Partners
      • Our Offices
      • Press Room
      • Annual Report
      • Help Center
  • Our Programs
    • Column 1
      • Common Sense Media
      • Common Sense Education
      • Advocacy Program
      • Digital Citizenship Program
      • Latino Program
      • Privacy Program
      • Research Program
  • Get Involved
    • Column 1
      • Donate
      • Join as a Parent
      • Join as an Educator
      • Join as an Advocate
      • Attend an Event
      • Enact Your CCPA Rights
      • Apply for Free Internet
      • We're Hiring

Follow Common Sense Education

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
Contact us / Privacy / / Terms of use / Community guidelines
© Common Sense Media. All rights reserved. Common Sense and other associated names and logos are trademarks of Common Sense Media, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization (FEIN: 41-2024986).