Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Amanda Todd's Mother Back B.C. Schools Plan To Help Parents Fight Cyberbullying

The Canadian Press, 01 Mar, 2018 12:16 PM
    VICTORIA — The mother of a British Columbia girl whose story of cyberbullying went around the world after she took her own life says offering social media education to parents is a good investment.
     
     
    Education Minister Rob Fleming says the government will provide $100,000 to the B.C. School Superintendents' Association to offer social media education meetings in every B.C. school district this year.
     
     
    Carol Todd says the training will give parents tools to support children as they navigate the digital world.
     
     
    Fifteen-year-old Amanda Todd died in 2012 shortly after posting a heart-wrenching video that revealed her emotional pain caused by online stalking.
     
     
    Fleming says cyberbullying touches the lives of B.C. children daily and positive online practices helps keep students safe.
     
     
    The Raising Digitally Responsible Learners program was part of an annual Pink Shirt Day anti-bullying ceremony at the legislature which was also attended by Premier John Horgan and about 100 high school students all wearing pink.
     
     
    Todd says the more parents know and understand the social media opportunities available to their children the safer they will be.
     
     
    "As a parent who has gone through the real life experiences of seeing the effects of cyberbullying on my child and how it has affected my family, I am appreciative of this investment."
     
     
    Fleming says he expects local parent advisory councils to hold the digital technology sessions for parents.
     
     
    "This is going to be used to conduct workshops for parents right down to the school level to help them understand the technology that is often in their kids' hands already," he says.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    WATCH: Latina Comes To The Defense Of A Muslim Couple Being Verbally Harassed On New York Subway

    WATCH: Latina Comes To The Defense Of A Muslim Couple Being Verbally Harassed On New York Subway
    This is the moment a New York City subway passenger defends Muslim riders from bigoted harassment.

    WATCH: Latina Comes To The Defense Of A Muslim Couple Being Verbally Harassed On New York Subway

    Shashi Tharoor Responds To Online Petition Wanting Him As UPA PM Contender In 2019

    More than 16,000 signatures have been cast on the online petition on change.org that demands Congress leader Shashi Tharoor to be nominated as the UPA's prime ministerial contender in 2019.

    Shashi Tharoor Responds To Online Petition Wanting Him As UPA PM Contender In 2019

    Will Circular Runways Be A Thing Of The Future At Airports?

    Will Circular Runways Be A Thing Of The Future At Airports?
    After spending years researching on the subject, Aviation expert Henk Hesselink of the Netherlands Aerospace Centre believes that circular runways could be the future of air travel. 

    Will Circular Runways Be A Thing Of The Future At Airports?

    Daughters Gang-Raped In Front Of Father In Gujarat; 5 Arrested

    Daughters Gang-Raped In Front Of Father In Gujarat; 5 Arrested
    In a shocking incident, two teenage girls were allegedly gang-raped by six men in front of their father in a moving vehicle in Devgadh Baria tehsil of Dahod district in Gujarat on Thursday, police said.

    Daughters Gang-Raped In Front Of Father In Gujarat; 5 Arrested

    Kansas Declares 'Indian American Appreciation Day', In Memory Of Srinivas Kuchibhotla

    Kansas Declares 'Indian American Appreciation Day', In Memory Of Srinivas Kuchibhotla
    The US state of Kansas has declared March 16 as "Indian American Appreciation Day" to honour Indian engineer Srinivas Kuchibhotla who was killed in an apparent hate crime.

    Kansas Declares 'Indian American Appreciation Day', In Memory Of Srinivas Kuchibhotla

    B.C. Sidesteps High Heel Ban, Temporarily, As Private Member's Bill Dies

    VICTORIA — A private member's bill that would make it illegal for employers to require female workers to wear high heels on the job died when the British Columbia legislature adjourned on Thursday.

    B.C. Sidesteps High Heel Ban, Temporarily, As Private Member's Bill Dies