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7 Mistakes You're Making with Your Child’s Online Safety (and How to Fix Them Right Now)


The biggest mistakes parents make with online safety are relying solely on technology to "babysit" their child’s digital life and overlooking the "ghost" devices: like gaming consoles and smart TVs: that provide unfiltered internet access right under their noses. While tools like Bark or Covenant Eyes are incredible assets, they are meant to be bridges for conversation, not walls that replace parental presence. To fix these mistakes, you must transition from being a digital "policeman" to a digital "mentor," integrating your faith and values into the very fabric of your child’s tech usage.

In our modern world, protecting our children is no longer just about locking the front door at night; it’s about understanding the digital doorways that remain wide open in our pockets and on our nightstands. As parents and leaders, we are called to steward the hearts of our children, guiding them through a digital wilderness that is often designed to capture their attention and compromise their character.

1. The "Set It and Forget It" Fallacy

One of the most common mistakes is installing a piece of software and assuming the job is done. Whether you use Bark, which monitors for potential dangers and alerts you to red flags, or Covenant Eyes, which focuses on transparency and accountability, these tools are only as effective as the parent who reviews the data.

When we treat parental controls as a "fire-and-forget" solution, we miss the heart of the matter. If Bark sends you an alert about a concerning search or a message, the goal isn't just to take the phone away: it’s to find out what is happening in your child’s soul. Why were they looking for that? What pressure are they feeling?

The Fix: Use monitoring software as a diagnostic tool. When an alert pops up, don’t lead with a lecture. Lead with a question. Technology provides the data, but your relationship provides the discipleship.

A parent and child using a tablet together to practice digital discipleship and healthy online safety habits.

2. Ignoring "Ghost" Devices

We often do a great job of securing the "big three": the smartphone, the tablet, and the family laptop. However, the internet lives in places we often overlook. Gaming consoles like the PlayStation 5, Xbox, and Nintendo Switch have built-in web browsers and unmonitored chat functions. Smart TVs, digital assistants (like Alexa), and even some high-tech printers can provide a backdoor to the web.

Children are naturally curious and tech-savvy. If they find a boundary on their phone, they will often look for a "workaround" on a device you haven't secured.

The Fix: Conduct a "digital sweep" of your home. Walk through every room and identify every single device that connects to your Wi-Fi. Ensure that your router-level filtering covers these devices or that you have manually adjusted the privacy settings on every console and smart TV in the house.

3. Underutilizing Native Parental Controls

Many parents invest in third-party apps but forget to use the powerful tools already built into the devices they own. Apple’s "Family Sharing" and Google’s "Family Link" are incredibly robust. They allow you to set "Downtime," limit specific app categories (like social media), and require "Ask to Buy" permission before any new app is downloaded.

By not using these, you are leaving the front door unlocked. These native tools are often harder for children to bypass than third-party apps because they are integrated into the operating system itself.

The Fix: Spend thirty minutes this evening diving into the "Screen Time" settings on iOS or "Family Link" on Android. Set a hard shut-off time for all devices: ideally one hour before bedtime: and keep the devices in a central charging station, not in the bedroom. For more on building character in this area, you can read about Christian parenting in the age of social media.

4. The False Security of Encrypted Apps

We live in an age of privacy, which is generally a good thing for adults. However, for children, end-to-end encryption in apps like WhatsApp, Signal, or even some features in Instagram and Snapchat can be a major blindspot. Because the data is encrypted, many network-level filters cannot "see" what is being sent.

This creates a "dark zone" where bullying, inappropriate content, or grooming can occur without a single red flag being raised by your home Wi-Fi filter.

The Fix: Your safety strategy must be device-level, not just network-level. This means physically checking the phone and having an "open-door policy" regarding passwords. Remind your child that privacy is earned through maturity and that, as their protector, you have a responsibility to know who they are talking to.

A lantern shining light on a digital circuit path, representing parental guidance and protection for children online.

5. Treating Safety as a Lecture, Not a Dialogue

If the only time you talk to your child about the internet is when they’ve done something wrong, they will learn to hide their digital life from you. Fear-based parenting creates better liars, not safer children.

In a religious setting, we often focus on the "thou shalt nots," but we forget to explain the "why." We want our children to choose purity and safety because they value their own hearts and their relationship with God, not just because they are afraid of getting caught.

The Fix: Make digital safety a casual, everyday conversation. Ask questions like:

  • "What’s the funniest video you saw today?"

  • "Did you see anything that made you feel uncomfortable or weird?"

  • "How do your friends talk to each other in the group chat?"

By being a safe space for their questions, you ensure they come to you when they eventually: and they will: encounter something they shouldn't have.

6. Being a Poor Digital Role Model

This is perhaps the hardest mistake to face. If we tell our children to stay off their phones at the dinner table while we are busy checking emails or scrolling through news feeds, our words lose their weight. Leadership, especially faith-based leadership, is caught more than it is taught.

If our children see us using technology as an escape or a place for gossip, they will mirror that behavior. Our digital habits set the "thermal" for our home's atmosphere.

The Fix: Model the "Great Digital Disconnect." Designate screen-free zones and times. Show your children that people are more important than pixels. When you are with them, be with them. Put your phone in a drawer and give them your full, undivided attention.

7. Assuming Your Child’s Tech-Savviness Equals Maturity

Just because a child knows how to edit a TikTok video or navigate a complex Minecraft server doesn't mean they have the emotional or spiritual maturity to handle the content they might encounter. There is a vast difference between technical skill and wisdom.

We often give children "Formula 1" engines (the internet) before they have even learned how to ride a bicycle. Their brains are still developing the ability to weigh consequences and recognize manipulation.

The Fix: Slow down. There is no biological requirement for a child to have a smartphone at age ten. Consider "dumb phones" or devices with limited functionality until they have demonstrated the character required for the responsibility. Check out our guide to movies for more ways to navigate media choices with wisdom.

A child with a compass facing a digital mountain, representing the search for wisdom and moral direction in technology.

Takeaway / Next Step

The goal of online safety is not to live in fear, but to live in wisdom. Your next step is to choose one "ghost" device in your home today and secure it. Then, sit down with your child: not to lecture them, but to pray with them and explain that your rules exist because you love them and want to protect the priceless gift of their childhood. We are called to love like Jesus, and that means protecting the vulnerable and guiding them toward the light.

Online safety is an ongoing journey of course-correction and self-growth for both parent and child. Stay vigilant, stay connected, and remember that your influence as a parent is the most powerful "filter" your child will ever have.

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Layne McDonald Founder, Director www.laynemcdonald.com

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Dr. Layne McDonald
Creative Pastor • Filmmaker • Musician • Author
Memphis, TN

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