Understanding how peer pressure influences children's behaviour online, from sharing content they are uncomfortable with to engaging in risky challenges.
Peer pressure has always been part of growing up, but digital platforms amplify it significantly. Children may feel pressured to share personal content, participate in dangerous challenges, join group chats they are uncomfortable in, or behave in ways that do not reflect their true values — all to fit in or avoid being excluded by their peers.
Digital peer pressure often operates through group chats, social media comments, and online dares. Children may be pressured to share photos, forward inappropriate content, participate in viral challenges, or mock others to maintain their social standing. The public and permanent nature of online interactions raises the stakes — a refusal can lead to exclusion, while compliance can have lasting consequences.
1. Build your child's confidence to say no
Practise scenarios where your child can rehearse declining pressure in a way that feels natural to them. Phrases like 'that's not really my thing' or 'I'd rather not' can be powerful when practised in advance.
2. Discuss real examples of digital peer pressure
Use age-appropriate news stories or examples to discuss how peer pressure works online. Talk about the difference between being a good friend and doing something just because others expect it.
3. Encourage diverse friendships and offline interests
Children with a strong sense of identity and friendships outside their main social group are more resilient to peer pressure. Encourage activities, clubs, and friendships that build self-confidence independently of online validation.
ตรวจสอบล่าสุด: 2026-03-01
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