TEENS

Teens on the internet

There seem to be no shortage of stories about young girls meeting much, much older men over the internet and being involved in activities that are far beyond their years. Despite these stories 68.5% of parents say they allow their children unlimited and unsupervised surfing at home. A mere 40% are aware of who their children are in contact with on social networking sites and 41% are completely satisfied with their children’s conduct on the net. On the other hand, 16% are worried. 

Swedish teens on the net
According to a survey carried out of 356 teens between 12-18 and 355 parents with teens between 12-18, 32.5% of teens have at one time taken on a false identity and 18% of girls have used a dating site that they are actually too young for – dramatically increasing the chance of grooming – adults trying to get in contact with children for sexual purposes.
 
Also according to the survey – 44.5% have at one time downloaded music and movies illegally, or 55.6% for those between 16-18. 26% of teens have logged into someone else’s social network account without permission and 22% have read another family member’s email.
 
Survey: Swedish Teens Internet Habits: What do parents know?  
Trend Micro/Ticketbox.net
 
Surfa Lugnt (Surf Easy) is a nationwide campaign aimed to spread knowledge about how to avoid viruses, attempts at fraud and other traps on the net. There is also a sub-section that addresses teens on the net. Post & Tele Styrelse, Telia and Microsoft are among those behind the initiative.
 
Skydda ditt barn på internet (Protect your child on the internet)
is a book written by IT-security expert Per Hellqvist and journalist Dag Öhrlund. They have also included a list of valuable
tips (Swedish) to help protect your child on the internet on their website.
 

 

Upper Secondary School or Non-Compulsory Education

When a teenager has completed their compulsory education, they are entitled to continue into gymnasium if they have passed their core subjects of Swedish, Maths and English. Virtually all pupils who apply are accepted meaning nearly 95% continues to this level. Gymnasium courses vary enormously from vocational courses such as agriculture and forestry to academic ones leading through to university study. All are three year courses.

The size of gymnasiums varies – the smallest have around 300 pupils, the largest up to 1500. Most courses are organised by the kommun (the municipality) but some courses are arranged by the landsting (the regional authority) and some – for example, physical education – are arranged at national level. This means every gymnasium is different – a different size, different range of courses, run by different authorise. In Stockholm alone, you can find gymnasiums specialising in IT, international studies, music, handicrafts, ballet, art, technical skills, transport – the list goes on – as well as numerous generalist gymnasium.

As with compulsory education, pupils may specialise but they still have to devote some time to general education. Swedish, Maths and English are all studied for more than 100 hours over the three year programme with other subjects also in the mix. In vocationally orientated courses, 15% of a pupil’s time will be spent ‘on the job’ in a place of work.

Find an initial list of your local gymnasium from Gulasidorna by searching ‘Gymnasium’ (on-line) or skolor (in the paper version but you will have to trawl through all different schools). If you live in an area where there are a variety of gymnasium to choose between, you will probably find they hold open days for pupils in year 9 of grundskolan. This is the perfect opportunity to find out more about the school and the courses they run. Some have their own websites (in Swedish) which can help narrow down the search. For Stockholmers, there is also a fair (www.gymnasiemassan.nu) held annually at which most of the local schools will represent themselves to help in cutting to the chase.