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Kid Search Engines

Kid Search Engines

 

 

 

The services below are designed primarily to serve the needs of children, either in focus, or by filtering out sites that some parents and teachers might find inappropriate for kids. These usually include sites that deal with explicit sexual matters, porn sites, violence, hate speech, gambling and drug use.

 

 

Major Children's Guides & Directories

 

 

The kid-safe directories below use human beings to filter out sites that might be considered objectionable for viewing by children.

 

Ask Jeeves For Kids

http://www.ajkids.com/

 

Ask Jeeves is a unique service where you enter a question, and Ask Jeeves tries to point you to the right web page that provides an answer. At Ask Jeeves For Kids, answers have been vetted for appropriateness. Also, if Ask Jeeves cannot answer a question, it pulls results from various search engines in its metacrawler mode. At Ask Jeeves For Kids, no site that is on the CyberPatrol block list is supposed to be listed.

 

KidsClick!

http://www.kidsclick.org/

 

Backed by librarians, KidsClick lists about 5,000 web sites in various categories.

 

Yahooligans

http://www.yahooligans.com/

 

Yahoo for kids, designed for ages 7 to 12. Sites are hand-picked to be appropriate for children. Also, unlike normal Yahoo, searches will not bring back matched found by crawling the web, if there is no match from within the Yahooligan listings. This prevents possibly objectionable sites from slipping onto the screen. Additionally, adult-oriented banner advertising will not appear within the service. Yahooligans is the oldest major directory for children, launched in March 1996.

 

Filtering Option

Most major search engines get their listings by crawling the web, rather than through human review and categorization, as with the sites listed above. This means its easy for possibly objectionable material to appear in search results.

 

As a solution, most major search engines offer some type of filtering ability. It's meant to keep out porn content and other material that most might not want children to encounter.

 

These filters are not perfect. Some material does get past them, and some safe material may get filtered out. To understand more about this, see the Harvard Criticizes Google's Adult Content Filter article that ran in our SearchDay newsletter in April 2003.

 

Below are tips on enabling porn filters for major search engines:

 

AllTheWeb: Use the Basic Settings page to enable the Offensive Content Filter option. The only works for searches in English.

 

AltaVista: Use the Family Filter Setup page.

 

AOL Search: Doesn't appear to offer a filter, but enabling Parental Controls might have an impact on web search matches.

 

Ask Jeeves: Use options for Content Filtering on the Your Settings page or try Ask Jeeves For Kids, listed above.

 

Google: See the SafeSearch help page for instructions on setting up filtering on a permanent or as-needed basis.

 

HotBot: Use the Block Offensive Content section of the Filter Preferences page. Note that you may need to set this again if you change from using the default "HotBot" search engine that's offered.

 

LookSmart: LookSmart has never accepted adult content for listing within its directory results. However, obscure queries might bring these up in the crawler-based results that are sometimes provided.

 

Lycos: Use the Adult Filter section of the Advanced Search Filters page.

 

MSN Search: No filter is offered. However, MSN Search may warn "You have entered a search term that is likely to return adult content" if you enter porn terms. That prevents you from immediately seeing possibly objectionable content. However, results are still offered, if you choose to go beyond this warning. These results come from an adult search engine that MSN Search is partnered with.

 

Teoma: Teoma doesn't appear to offer a filter.

 

Yahoo: Set the SafeSearch Filter option via the Search Preferences page.

 

Other Children's Search Engines

Awesome Library

http://www.awesomelibrary.org/

 

Over 14,000 sites have been classified into a directory, specifically organized for teachers, students and parents. Information can be found by browsing or searching.

 

Diddabdoo

http://www.dibdabdoo.com/

 

Billed as an ad free, non-commercial directory of web sites designed for child-safe searching.

 

Education World

http://www.education-world.com/

 

Over 500,000 sites of interest to educators. Browsable or searchable, with the ability to narrow in by appropriate grade level. Launched in spring 1996.

 

Fact Monster

http://www.factmonster.com/

 

Reference provider Information Please produces this site which provides facts and information oriented around the needs of children.

 

Family Source

http://www.family-source.com/

 

Crawler-based service described more in this review from About.com from October 2003: New Family Friendly Search Engine.

 

Kids Search Tools

http://www.rcls.org/ksearch.htm

 

Search a variety of kid-safe search engines from a single page.

 

SearchEdu.com

http://www.searchedu.com/

 

Index of pages built by crawling education web sites.

 

Teach-nology.com

http://www.teach-nology.com/

 

Directory of web sites for teachers and educators.

 

TekMom's Search Tools for Students

http://www.tekmom.com/search/

 

All-in-one search page for kid search sites and research resources.

 

 
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