Wednesday, February 29, 2012

AT&T Joins With iKeepSafe to Promote Mobile Safety Resources & Campaign, Urging Youth to Learn Smart Cell Phone Habits

New Program Will Provide Educators and Parents with Critical Tools to Help Kids Use Mobile Devices Safely

Rochester, NY (myPressManager.com) February 28, 2012

Today, iKeepSafe and AT&T*are proud to announce in the launch of Mobile Safe – a program that offers resources for parents and educational games for students, with the goal of teaching kids smart and safe mobile habits. The program launched at an event at the Museum of Play in Rochester, NY.

The Mobile Safe resources are available today at www.cellphonesmart.org. The program focuses on six principles of cell phone use:

1. Identity/Reputation Presentation and Monitoring: Use cell phones to portray yourself in safe, healthy, and fun ways while protecting both identity and reputation;
2. Relationship Management—Online and Offline: Maintain relationships using communication that best balances clarity and convenience for a healthy interaction in a given situation;
3. Multitasking: Focus on one activity at a time, as appropriate, so you can actually do more, have more fun, and stay safer;
4. Domains of Use: Learn strategies for non-disruptive phone use that also keeps you connected and entertained;
5. Responsibilities to Self, Family, and the Law: Learn how to use cell phones in ways that do not put yourself or your families at risk; and
6. Maximize the positives: Learn the positive entertainment, social and safety opportunities that come with a cell phone.

"We're deeply committed to equipping parents and children with the tools they need to stay informed, and are pleased to be working with iKeepSafe on proactively addressing this important issue of mobile safety," said Marissa Shorenstein, president of AT&T New York. "As more and more kids use mobile devices – and at younger ages – it's critical that they understand how to use this devices safely and responsibly. Mobile Safe will help achieve just that."

The Mobile Safe curriculum was developed through a cooperative agreement between the U.S. Department of Justice and Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP), INOBTR (“I Know Better”), a non-profit organization focused on educating kids through public awareness to keep them safe; and the Internet Keep Safe Coalition (iKeepSafe), a non-profit international alliance focused on teaching youth about using new media devices and platforms in safe and healthy. iKeepSafe partnered with the Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT); the Center for Media and Child Health at Children’s Hospital (CMCH) at Boston and Woogi World, a virtual school for K-6 students to develop the resources.

A leader in consumer education and safety initiatives, AT&T supported an evaluation of these new resources in conjunction with CMCH. The robust analysis examined data collected during a six-month long pilot, and assessed the curriculum’s effectiveness. Researchers compared the educational games to each other as well as considered their individual strengths and weaknesses. Based on the findings, Woogi World game developers improved the games for future use nationally.

“It’s important to arm this new generation of cell phone users with information to be responsible, ethical and resilient when using technology,” iKeepSafe CEO and President, Marsali Hancock said. “We are proud to have the support of a mobile leader like AT&T to empower educators and parents to teach these important lessons to youth to promote cell phone safety.”

In addition to the Mobile Safe curriculum, a new public awareness campaign launched today in Rochester aiming to teach area youth about safe and smart cell phone use. The “Cell Phone Smart” campaign supports the Mobile Safe curriculum and is comprised of educational public service ads that will appear at area movie theaters, as well as radio PSAs that will air on local stations. In addition, grassroots materials such as posters, brochures and fact sheets will be distributed and made available for community leaders to use as awareness tools. Additional cell phone safety resources can be found online at the campaign’s website, www.cellphonesmart.org. All campaign materials are available for download at www.projectyouthsafety.org.

The campaign kicked off officially with an event gathering educators, education administrators and local officials invested in protecting Rochester’s youth through this public awareness initiative.

More information on AT&T’s safety initiatives can be found at: http://www.att.net/smartcontrols. />
*AT&T products and services are provided or offered by subsidiaries and affiliates of AT&T Inc. under the AT&T brand and not by AT&T Inc.

 

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Scott & White Hospital-College Station Marks Milestone

- Celebrates topping out of new facility -

College Station, TX (myPressManager.com) February 09, 2012

Scott & White Healthcare announced today the completion of the erection of the structure on its new, 143-bed acute care hospital in College Station. The milestone was marked with a “topping out” ceremony at the facility, located at the intersection of Texas Hwy 6 and Rock Prairie Road.

Measuring 365,000-square-feet, the six-story facility represents the collaborative work of Jacobs Engineering Group, Inc., Kitchell, and Adams Architecture. About 275 trade workers are currently employed at the site and that number is expected to increase to 400 as the project progresses.

Scott & White Hospital-College Station will house an emergency department, cardiac services including cardiac catheterization labs, neonatal intensive care unit, operating rooms, maternity services suites, endoscopic procedure suites, inter-operative robotics and other specialty services, all supported by a pharmacy, comprehensive state-of-the-art imaging technology and other diagnostic capabilities.

With a projected completion date of the summer of 2013, the new hospital will cover roughly eight acres of enclosed space, supported by 25,000 cubic yards of concrete and 700 tons of steel. The facility façade will be composed of stone and brick veneer, with architectural cast stone trim and curtainwall.

Scott & White Hospital-College Station will open initially with 119 beds and can be expanded to accommodate another 24 beds when the need arises “The magnitude of such an enormous undertaking and what it means to the future of patient care in College Station hits me each time I step foot on the site,” said Jason Jennings, chief executive officer, Scott & White Healthcare College Station.

“This facility symbolizes Scott & White’s commitment to the community and will foster our unrivaled ability to deliver a continuity of care to the Brazos Valley,” said William Rayburn, M.D., chief medical officer, Scott & White Healthcare College Station.

 

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

iKeepSafe and ConnectSafely Announce The Launch Of The 2012 Edition Of “A Parents’ Guide To Facebook”

Arlington, VA (myPressManager.com) February 07, 2012

In coordination with Safer Internet Day, iKeepSafe is thrilled to announce the launch of the revised 2012 edition of “A Parents' Guide to Facebook”, written by ConnectSafely.org’s Larry Magid and Anne Collier. As Facebook continues to change, the authors updated the parent guide’s content to reflect the most recent features and policies on Facebook. The free Guide can be downloaded in PDF format at www.FBparents.org.

Designed to teach parents how to help their teens use Facebook safely and constructively, the guide features important topics such as how to parent Facebook users, managing reputation in the digital age, actual risks in social media, managing your privacy on Facebook, reporting problems, and more. The guide is already being translated into Arabic and Spanish, with other languages and international distribution to follow.

The revised 2012 edition features a number of new sections, including social reporting, the new timeline, and Facebook-related computer security. The social reporting section walks parents through this new way of reporting problems on Facebook, highlighting best practices for specific incidents or situations that may occur.

“As Facebook is constantly changing its features and policies, it is important that we continue to update helpful resources such as the Parents’ Guide to keep parents up to date on the most recent privacy and security threats and risks that exist on Facebook”, says Marsali Hancock, president of iKeepSafe. “The guide allows parents and teens to discuss skills and safeguards to utilize Facebook safely and securely, while creating a generation of responsible, ethical and resilient digital citizens.”

"Facebook is a valuable resource for youth around the world, and most are using it safely and responsibly," said ConnectSafely.org co-director and Guide co-author Larry Magid.

"Our goal is to help parents understand what Facebook is all about and give them hands-on instructions in how to optimize it with their children," said co-author Anne Collier, co-director of ConnectSafely.org

ConnectSafely and iKeepSafe hope that the Parents’ Guide will ignite discussions and collaboration among social media users of all ages. To learn more about how to strengthen your teens’ privacy and safety on Facebook, view the 2012 Edition of “A Parents’ Guide to Facebook.”

About the Internet Keep Safe Coalition

The Internet Keep Safe Coalition is a broad partnership of governors and first spouses, attorneys general, public health and educational professionals, law enforcement and industry leaders working together for the health and safety of youth online. The Coalition provides innovative resources, including parent tutorials and educational materials like the Faux Paw the Techno Cat® Internet safety book series and animated films for children. iKeepSafe uses its unique partnerships to disseminate the safety resources to families worldwide, including its Generation Safe™ pilot programs launched in China, India and Australia. To learn more, visit http://www.ikeepsafe.org/.


About ConnectSafely

ConnectSafely is for parents, teens, educators, advocates—everyone engaged with and interested in the impact of the social Web. The user-driven, all-media, multi-platform, fixed and mobile social Web is a big part of young people's lives, and this is the central space—linked to from social networks across the Web—for learning about safe, civil use of Web 2.0 together. ConnectSafely’s forum is also designed to give teens and parents a voice in the public discussion about youth online safety begun back in the '90s. The organization also has a variety of social-media safety tips for teens and parents, the latest youth-tech news, and many other resources. To learn more, visit http://www.connectsafely.org or http://www.facebook.com/connectsafely.