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Digital Methods of Working with Children: Ethics, Rights and Responsibilities

This guidance paper outlines some of the ethical considerations relating to the use of digital methods for researching with children. Given the fast-paced development of technology and digital media, in this paper we encourage researchers to consider ethical issues as they apply to their chosen digital method and study design.

The Internet is now an integral part of children’s everyday lives, and its importance, as both the subject of and tool for research, will only increase. In the UK alone, an Ofcom report reveals that more than half of children are online by the age of three, and from 12 years old onwards 99% of children have used the internet. Children use the Internet for a variety of purposes: education, communication, information-sharing, entertainment, gaming, creative outlets, shopping, and more. Hence, many children find it easier to ‘be themselves’ online, and have been shown to love the use of digital technology. They also tend to be quicker in adapting to and learning to use new technology than other age groups. It is absolutely essential, therefore, that researchers develop their capacities to deploy digital resources, to enable them to engage with children in the online spaces they so readily occupy.

This paper is Guidance Paper 4 in the series The Ethics of Research Involving Children: Common Questions, Potential Strategies and Useful Guidance.

Read the paper, Digital Methods of Working with Children: Ethics, Rights and Responsibilities