Saturday, July 24, 2010
Cyber-Bully
What is cyber-bullying? To my disappointment cyber-bullying is not the idea of making the quintessential 80’s movie bully, Billy Zabka, in to a cyborg/terminator type thing. Sadly it’s not Super Zabka, it is the use of the internet to humiliate and/or threaten others. I personal have no real experience with cyber-bullying, and in fact think it’s rather silly. I definitely see the harm in cyber-bulling when it gets to the level of stealing passwords and altering people’s internet profiles and belonging, but I think most of the rest of what falls under cyber-bulling is pretty minor. My personal feeling on the matter is, if you don’t like something or someone else comments, don’t listen or turn off your computer. Just walk away, who cares what someone else thinks or says about you, they are just words. If it ever escalates to a point of being physical or goes to an extreme well then it should be address with the aid of the law.
Schools are definitely handcuffed by the law and all of the legal issues when dealing with cyber-bulling. So much of cyber-bulling is done off-campus that schools have no real power to take action. Only when it gets to the level of disturbing class or the school environment can action be taken. And even when the school has taken action there is probably a good chance that the school or district could be sued.
I think the signs of a student being cyber-bullied for me will be really hard to spot. I understand the feeling of depression, anxiety, and nervousness, but really it’s on the internet and they’re just words. Use the block button, ignore it or just leave the site or web page. I can’t see how schools can really regulate what is happening off-campus. The only thing I really can think of is blocking most of the social networking sites, like Facebook and MySpace, on campus. In the point-counter-point article, I totally agree that having teacher or administers surfing sites for inappropriate material is more or less a complete waste of time. When need to be teaching not monitoring websites. Can we as teachers teach out students the dangers of cyber-bullying and what it is and how to avoid it? Absolutely, but I don’t see as our job to regulate what is being put on the internet.
In my class, I will be pre-emptive about cyber-bullying. If I use a website or a blog, I will tell my students what is and is not acceptable to say or write. If there is something that they don’t like, don’t look at it. If there someone that is giving them a hard time, block that user or report them for abusive behavior. If there is a need I can have private
Tuesday, July 20, 2010
Social Networking Bit
Looking back at the searches that anyone with a computer and do, I do think I will either have to delete some of my social networking sites or rework them and edit out anything that might make me look bad as a teacher. I think it’s unfair as teachers out action might be view through a microscope by the community and held to higher standards, but I also understand the reasoning behind that. AS teachers were have taken the responsibility of teaching young people, and while our goals and lessons plans lay in a certain field, kid are smart enough and will pick up on others things we may or may not do. So it is important, and maybe no fair, that we are extra aware of the things we say and do, whether its in the classroom or not.
The whole article about social-networking and teachers was pretty interesting, although it sounded a little dated. Its amazing how short 2 years is and how fast and how much technology can change in that amount of time. What was most interesting were how many cases of teachers being fired over something seen on a social-networking site, and then having those teachers turn around and suing the school district that had fired them. To me it seems like a lose-lose situation. The school loses a teacher and loses a lawsuit, and the teacher loses their job and livelihood and most likely has a big red-flag attached to their name going forward.
Before this class started, I began to protect myself from the possible dangers of private information on social-networking sites going public. Yes I was young and dumb once (maybe I still a little dumb), and yes there are some things I wish would not have found there way onto the internet, but those things are in the past now. I can’t change them, and I’m not really sure that I would, but they don’t necessarily represent the person I am today, and so they find a private place with me and not on any social-networking sites. And then there is the notion of common sense, just don’t be stupid and protect yourself.
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
Digital Status
Am I a digital native, immigrant or alien? This is a pretty interesting question, one in which I think I fall in between native and immigrant. I’ve spent many hours playing video games, watching TV and movies, surfing the internet and so on, which makes me think I am pretty native to the language of technology. In fact 10,000 hours playing video games and 20,000 hours watching TV seems a little low to me. I do take a little pride in how much of video game/TV/movie nerd I am. But on the flip side I have worked with others, who far surpass me in my uses of technology. For example I have a few friends that have had their own blogs for years, while I have refused to create one for myself (not because I don’t know how to make one, but rather I think I have very few things that important enough to talk about and it seems like a lot of work!)
I have had a surprisingly large amount of technology use in the classroom. In high school both my parents worked at Hewlett Packard, and so I was fortunate to have a lot of technology at home, which I thought meant I was good with computers. I later found out that there were kids that had may more experience and drive to use technology. I learned this my sophomore year in high school when I enrolled in a computer technology class with my friend. It was a start-up program, and my class was one of the first classes to be involved in the program. We were given tasks such as building a computer, writing a web page in html, setting up a school webpage and setting up a school-wide network. I could not handle all the work and it far exceeded my capabilities so the next quarter I decided not to take the next computer technology class.
Able to avoid a lot of super technology through the rest of high school I was put right back on top of the techno world when I entered college. Not that I enrolled in any computer science classes or tech classes, but I was luck enough to be on a very wired campus during the height of programs like Napster and networking games like Counter Strike. Actually
Reading the article by Marc Prensky has changed my mind a little bit about technology as a teaching device. As a PE and Health teacher I originally couldn’t think of many ways my students could use technology in or for class, but the second article had a really cool example of how it could be apply to health. I thought you could only be physically healthy by doing physical activities, but with the results Click Health came up with I think I understand that playing certain video games can help kids with self-efficacy. This in turn can help them monitor things like self-health and what their bodies are doing. The technology is not replacing exercise, it is aiding it. Although I have been pretty anti-blogging, I do see the benefits of having a website or blog, where I can keep my class up-to-date about assignments or projects that are due. I can also see it as a good place to have other helpful websites where they can find more detailed information about subjects I wasn’t able to fully cover in class. In the end I understand tailoring my lesson plans around how my students learn is just one more way of reaching them. If I allow them to use their smart-phones to do some research, well then smart-phone it up!