International Convention on Children's right
CyberDodo and Ants (1-1)
CyberDodo and Bees (1-5)
Beaches (1-6)
The Convention (2-1)
Definition of the Child – Article 1 and 2 - (2-2)
The Mission of CyberDodo (2-40)
CyberDodo and the waste of energy (1-20)
CyberDodo and persons with disabilities (2-20)
The importance of the media – Article 17 - (2-15)
CyberDodo and the Dangers of Fire (1-7)
Rivers (1-8)
Understanding the best interests of the child (2-3)
CyberDodo and the Monkeys (1-13)
Camels (1-31)
CyberDodo and Water (1-32)
Medicinal plants (1-33)
CyberDodo and the Penguins (1-34)
CyberDodo and child soldiers (2-30)
CyberDodo and the Cheetah (1-23)
CyberDodo and the TseTse fly (1-47)
CyberDodo fights against the sexual exploitation of children (2-27)
CyberDodo and Coral (1-16)
CyberDodo and ground water tables (1-53)
The Right to a Nationality (2-37)
CyberDodo and the Forests (1-9)
CyberDodo takes on Obesity (2-34)
CyberDodo and the Eagles (1-21)
CyberDodo and the Implementation of the Agreement (2-4)
CyberDodo and Tortoises (1-24)
CyberDodo and the Freedom of Expression (2-13)
CyberDodo and the farmyard (1-25)
CyberDodo fights against Child Trafficking (2-28)
CyberDodo and Rhinos (1-28)
CyberDodo takes on the cigarette (2-35)
CyberDodo takes on child abuse (2-16)
CyberDodo fights against child labour (2-25)
CyberDodo and greenhouse gases (1-40)
CyberDodo fights against drug abuse (2-26)
CyberDodo and Street kids(1-38)
CyberDodo fights against child abduction (2-11)
CyberDodo and Clones (1-4)
CyberDodo and the Whales (1-10)
CyberDodo and the Right to Education (2-38)
CyberDodo and Dolphins (1-11)
3 minutes to discover CyberDodo!
CyberDodo defends the Right to Freedom of Expression in the Courts (2-12)
CyberDodo and solar energy (1-45)
CyberDodo and the Elephants (1-22)
CyberDodo fights against hunger (2-6)
CyberDodo and the Ozone Layer (1-35)
CyberDodo and Urban pollution (1-19)
CyberDodo and mother’s milk (2-7)
CyberDodo and Nutrition (1-55)
Raising awareness of the Convention (2-39)
CyberDodo and city maintenance (1-41)
CyberDodo and the Sea Lion (1-18)
CyberDodo and Dodos (1-2)
CyberDodo fights against sexual aggression (2-33)
Multimedia Press Release
CyberDodo and the Sharks (1-27)
CyberDodo and the Molluscs (1-26)
CyberDodo and illegal animal trafficking (1-30)
CyberDodo and the Right to Live with one’s own Parents (2-09)
CyberDodo and draught horses (1-36)
The Right to have a name
CyberDodo and the Dams (1-37)
CyberDodo commits to the right to respect of personal privacy (2-14)
CyberDodo and the Alligators (1-39)
CyberDodo and abandoned animals (1-43)
Let us fight against the sexual exploitation of children
CyberDodo and Heritage (1-44)
CyberDodo for the Rights Governing Adoption Practices (2-18)
CyberDodo and Global Warming (1-50)
CyberDodo and Pesticides (1-51)
CyberDodo and the Walrus (1-46)
CyberDodo and the Otter (1-52).
CyberDodo and Salmon (1-54)
Cyberdodo and the right to adequate living standards (2-21)
CyberDodo and Children’s Rights Edupack
CyberDodo and Spiders (1-56)
CyberDodo and Pollution (1-57)
Make a donation
Universal Declaration of Human Rights
CyberDodo defends the right to reunite families (2-10)
CyberDodo and the Bat (1-29)
CyberDodo and Farm Animals (1-58)
CyberDodo fights for the rights of minorities (2-23)
CyberDodo and Fertilizers (1-12)
CyberDodo and battery cage farming (1-49)
Competition: Become a Photo journalist for CyberDodo!
Hall of Fame (Winners of CyberDodo's tournaments)The emergence of new forms of media has drastically changed children's perception of the world around them.
According to Neil Postman (American Professor, deceased 2003), media such as the television as well as the internet have effectively blurred the boundaries according to which children and adults have lived in separate universes since the Rennaissance !
By means of media imagery, content which notions of propriety and other prohibitions have attempted to hide from children for several centuries is made immediately accesible. From the beginning of their transmission, parents and teachers everywhere have been in competition with the media for children's attention. The authority of parents and teachers indeed seems rather feeble in view of these ubiquitous screens that modify children's behavior and lead certain children to believe that learning, and even books are no longer necessary.

Even if the child from then on enjoyed practically free access to an adult world, society continues to maintain a discourse according to which children are compared with vulnerable and innocent beings. As such, a rather filmsy and paradoxal boundary continues to separates the adult and the child.
Society attempts, rather struggles, to protect the latter from the world of the former. One by one, society destroys the fantasies associated with childhood, but at the same time, given a prevailing sense of guilt, wants to emphasize the fundamental needs of children. According to this thinking, innocence, dreams and vulnerability must should - be involiable characteristics of childhood.
Quite a problematic riddle
Notably, the International Convention on the Rights of the Child was revised to officially endorse the respect due of adults to children.
What is the relationship between children and the media, notably television ?
Little by little, each child learns to differentiate an internal and external world. As he or she begins to master language, a child becomes capable of telling stories, and is able to use their senses to comprehend reality. Media such as television or the internet submerge the child in a virtual world a representation of the world.
If we think like Professor Rufo, television and by analogy, the internet, today allow children access to knowledge that his or her elders only enjoyed much later. Television or the internet can thus prove cultural resources when explained and presented with the assistance of an adult's interpretation.
Adults, specifically parents, must elect specific programs that can be watched by the entire family. As child psychatrist S. Clerget indicated, it is important to privilege television that incites unity, as opposed to programming and habits which encourage individualism.
Indeed, for media sources to participate in the education of our children, their basic education is a necessary prerequisite. Childen must learn to exercise a prudent use of various media, and be assisted to develop a spirit of healthy critique in order to sort through the flood of information to which they are subjected.
Why is education inextricably linked to the dissemination of information ?
The child constructs his world and his self he needs time to understand and imagine, to interpret what he sees around him. At around 12 years of age, he will watch the most television as he discovers the universe and develops a critical need of access to the exterior world. He or she will ask questions, just as his or thinking becomes analytical. The twelve year old begins to judge, to compare. It is at this age that children will assimilate what the television or internet screen presents to him with the greatest level of intensity.