Thursday, May 21, 2015

New emojis help children report abuse where words fail

BRIS, a Swedish non-profit that runs a national children's hotline, released a new set of emojis this week that depict several situations of abuse. The organization hopes children and teenagers will use the images to alert adults of these instances and other stressful situations. Image courtesy of BRIS

BRIS, a Swedish non-profit that runs a national children’s hotline, released a new set of emojis this week that depict several situations of abuse. The organization hopes children and teenagers will use the images to alert adults of these instances and other stressful situations. Image courtesy of BRIS

A Swedish non-profit hopes a new set of emojis they released will help children and teenagers signal instances of abuse or communicate their stressful situations to adults when words aren’t enough.

Image courtesy of BRIS

Image courtesy of BRIS

BRIS, an organization that runs a national children’s helpline, created the “Abused Emojis,” an application that comes with a range of emojis that depict bad feelings and illustrate mistreatment. BRIS spokeswoman Silvia Ernhagen said the emojis are a “door opener” for children to talk about these difficult topics.

“[The abuse emojis] could be a way of starting to signal that you do need help, but you’re too afraid maybe to put your own words on it because once you put words on it, it starts to get scary,” Ernhagen said. “Sometimes it’s easier to express feelings with pictures or drawings.”

Unlike a typical set of joyful emojis, BRIS’ collection includes a sad child with a black eye or bandage on its cheek, images of parents drinking beer or wine, a child contemplating “dark thoughts” (represented with a skull) and a child witnessing verbal abuse.

BRIS hopes the emojis expand a child’s vocabulary to communicate without words. In one emoji, a familiar poop symbol sits atop a child’s head. It’s similar to saying that you “feel like crap,” Ernhagen said.

BRIS’ abuse emojis follow a recent update to the emoji keyboard in February when Apple introduced new skin tones for the symbols.

Daphne Young, spokesperson for the Childhelp National Child Abuse Hotline, said she’s unaware if anything comparable exists in the United States, but that BRIS’ effort is a “brilliant” way for children to visually express their feelings.

Image courtesy of BRIS

Image courtesy of BRIS

The emojis would allow nonverbal or pre-verbal children, as well as children from different cultures, to overcome any language barriers, she said.

Young said the Childhelp hotline itself does have an app, among several other methods of outreach, to help the organization connect with victims of abuse, but it does not currently employ a similar set of visual cues for abuse.

The post New emojis help children report abuse where words fail appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

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