The Flow Foundation is to mark the 20th anniversary of Safer Internet Day with its annual Youth Summit at the Karl Hendrickson Auditorium at Jamaica College Tuesday (February 7).
The summit will be attended by more than 500 high school students and is set to feature insightful panel discussions led by personalities Dr Terri-Karelle Reid, Wayne Mitchell and Quite Perry and Joel Nomdarkham.
The event is to be hosted by media maven Debbie Bissoon under the theme ‘Connected and Protected’.
The panel will tackle broad issues affecting teens such as cyberbullying, data theft and online predators, while placing equal emphasis on how the internet can be used as a force for good to thwart some of the risks associated with online use.
Danyelle-Jordan Bailey, president of the National Secondary Students’ Council (NSSC) and a Youth Summit panellist, said the event will allow students to really think about how they can be smarter online.
“This is a good opportunity for students to think about the challenges they’re experiencing within the online space, and not just identifying the challenges, but finding the solutions to them,” the St Hugh’s High School sixth-former said.
To further integrate online safety among the student population, the Flow Foundation has also established a J$1.5m Safer Internet School Grant. Schools can tap into the grant by submitting a project proposal on how they would promote internet safety. The schools with the best implementable ideas can access up to $250,000 to bring their project to life.
This new element was particularly appealing to the NSSC president who further added: “In offering the solutions, the schools get a reward, and they can then implement their plan within their school community.
“So, it’s an amazing opportunity for students to see their work come to life and to actually conceptualise and implement something that’s good for them,” Bailey said.
The Flow Foundation has been a long-time advocate for internet safety by championing safer and more positive online behaviour and habits.
According to UNICEF, more than a third of young people report being cyberbullied and around 80 per cent say they feel in danger of sexual abuse or exploitation online. These statistics point to a need for more intervention from the public and private sectors.
Steven Price, chairman of the Flow Foundation, vice president and general manager for Flow Jamaica, said the youth summit will provide the knowledge students need while the grant will provide the opportunity for them to action what they’ve learnt.
“By empowering schools to actively participate in the safer internet movement, this initiative is meant to better integrate online safety in the school culture. It is a wonderful opportunity for students to share their creativity with powerful messages around an area of growing importance, especially for teenagers,” Price said.
“As a leading communications and entertainment provider in Jamaica and the region, Flow and our parent company, Liberty Latin America, are proud to be a part of this global initiative of creating safer online spaces,” he continued.
Other activities
Other ‘Connected and Protected’ safer internet activities include a Seniors’ Forum on February 21, which will be followed throughout the year by a student ambassador programme from March to May, parents’ sessions in the summer and a seniors’ sensitisation programme from September to November.
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