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Showing page 1 of 2 (19 total posts)
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To summarize my last several posts, I would urge any parent
that discovers an inappropriate relationship to report it to the agency having
jurisdiction. Remember the first and foremost priority for everyone involved is
the safety of the child. The second priority is preserving any evidence to
assist in the end goal of putting the suspect ...
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I have given many talks on the benefits of monitoring your children and have discussed, often time at length, the reasons for monitoring your kids. Usually the parent will start out with something along the lines of….well my kids are not like that, or… we have a very open relationship and my child would always come to me with something of that ...
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It has been my experience that a teenager involved in an inappropriate relationship will often only reveal only a small part of the relationship, and again this depends on the extent of the relationship. Sometimes you have a teenage child that has had hundreds of hours of communication with an adult. The child feels that nobody but the suspect ...
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If the communication between your child and the suspect is strictly via the Internet or through a cell phone then it is easier to control then if the subject is a teacher or otherwise close to the victim on a daily basis.
Depending how the relationship was discovered usually will give you an idea of how to control or stop the relationship. Many ...
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How to proceed, as a parent, once the relationship is discovered? It basically depends on the relationship between the child and the suspect. If the child and the suspect have normal daily contact, i.e. the suspect is a teacher or a coach maybe even a close neighbor, then some measures need to be taken to insure the integrity of the criminal ...
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My daughter has been driving for a few weeks now, and the contract is working perfectly. She calls her mother or I every time she has a new errand to do or if she is ever held up at work or school. Part of why the contract is working so well is she is convinced we have placed a GPS tracking device in her car. We will never tell her differently. I ...
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As I wrote in my last blog, my 16-year-old daughter took her behind-the-wheel test at the California Department of Motor Vehicles last week, and passed. She is now licensed to drive.
I read an article some time ago in which a child psychologist suggested having new teenage drivers sign a contract binding them to rules and regulations for ...
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I am exposed as a parent to the different scenarios in which my own children could become potential victims.
My 16-year-old daughter takes her “behind-the–wheel” at DMV this week. She has had a driving instructor coming to the house and taking her to practice driving for the past month or so. There have been a couple of occasions where the ...
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School is back in. Now is the perfect time to make the
dedication to actively monitor our children.
My 14-year-old son just
started high school today and only has classes with a couple of his friends, so
he is now forced to start making new friends. I have no idea whom he will
be-friend or what kind of home life ...
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It is common thinking, even at the national level, to
advocate only allowing computers in a common area of the home such as the
kitchen or living room. Often times you will hear the bedroom as the worst
place to put a child’s computer. ...
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