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For My Summer 2008 C&I 401 Students « Cycling Through Ed Tech
For My Summer 2008 C&I 401 Students « Cycling Through Ed Tech
Cheri Toledo writes about internet safety, plus Twitter as a Personal Learning Network for teachers. I love her phrase to describe the typical paranoid response to kids being online: the "Ostrich Safety Method."
Too often, school boards and districts, teachers, and parents use the Ostrich Safety Method: block everything and don’t talk about it. This is not a sound educational method.
·drctedd.wordpress.com·
For My Summer 2008 C&I 401 Students « Cycling Through Ed Tech
Schoolboards: net dangers over-rated; bring social networks to school - TECH.BLORGE.com
Schoolboards: net dangers over-rated; bring social networks to school - TECH.BLORGE.com
Only 4% of the students said they'd ever had an online conversation that made them uncomfortable, and only 2% said an online stranger tried to meet them in person. In fact, after surveying 1,277 students, the researchers found exactly one who reported they'd actually met a person from the internet without their parents' permission — and described this as "0.08 percent of all students."
In fact, 76% of parents expect social networking will improve their children's reading and writing skills, or help them express themselves more clearly, according to the study, and parents and communities "expect schools to take advantage of potentially powerful educational tools, including new technology."
·tech.blorge.com·
Schoolboards: net dangers over-rated; bring social networks to school - TECH.BLORGE.com
Bill Kerr: just the facts about online youth victimisation
Bill Kerr: just the facts about online youth victimisation
Disclosing personal information on line does not put teens at risk. What puts teens in danger is being willing to talk about sex on line with strangers or having a pattern of multiple risky activities on the web like going to sex sites and chat rooms<br><br>So, to prevent these crimes is going to be a lot more awkward, messy and complicated than something as bland as telling teens not to publish their personal information on line
·billkerr2.blogspot.com·
Bill Kerr: just the facts about online youth victimisation