MONROE - The Monroe School District will present "Internet, Cell Phone and Social Media Safety" by special agent Eric Szatkowski Wednesday, April 20.
The program is sponsored by the school district of Monroe and the Monroe Optimists.
Szatkowski will be meet with fourth- and fifth-grade elementary students, middle school students and high school students during the day on April 20. Each program is created with the target audience in mind and the information will vary depending on the grade level of the students.
He will then provide an adults-only parent presentation at 6 p.m. at the Performing Arts Center at Monroe High School.
Szatkowski is a special agent with the Wisconsin Department of Justice/Division of Criminal Investigation.
He has earned a reputation as one of the top officers in the nation in apprehending sexual predators of children who use the Internet or cell phones to seduce or exploit children.
His presentations on Internet and cell phone exploitation of children have been seen by more than 210,000 people in Wisconsin and the U.S. Audiences include police officers, prosecutors, child welfare advocates, correctional and social workers, civic groups, business professionals, doctors, parents, teachers, and students.
The program is sponsored by the school district of Monroe and the Monroe Optimists.
Szatkowski will be meet with fourth- and fifth-grade elementary students, middle school students and high school students during the day on April 20. Each program is created with the target audience in mind and the information will vary depending on the grade level of the students.
He will then provide an adults-only parent presentation at 6 p.m. at the Performing Arts Center at Monroe High School.
Szatkowski is a special agent with the Wisconsin Department of Justice/Division of Criminal Investigation.
He has earned a reputation as one of the top officers in the nation in apprehending sexual predators of children who use the Internet or cell phones to seduce or exploit children.
His presentations on Internet and cell phone exploitation of children have been seen by more than 210,000 people in Wisconsin and the U.S. Audiences include police officers, prosecutors, child welfare advocates, correctional and social workers, civic groups, business professionals, doctors, parents, teachers, and students.