Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Love how mcps is immediately blamed. Hey parents- maybe you should have conversations with your kids about what is allowed and have them use their devices in the kitchen/living room where they can be monitored? Sure mcps can block sites but kids still figure out ways to access things they aren’t supposed to. So if it’s happening at home, is it really the systems fault?
This exactly. MCPS is a school system. Not a prison and not a cyber security company. They try to take reasonable measures to protect their infrastructure systems and the people utilizing them. But on every computer system, the greatest area of weakness is the people using the system. Fortunately/Unfortunately the key people using the systems at MCPS are kids, who view rule breaking as a challenge and means to access material that others deem inappropriate for them. Not to mention they have a hard time recon and understanding danger, particularly since most are so sheltered. The only way to solve this would be to completely lock the system down and then make every little request for sure access go through IT. I guarantee you that would be just as painful. It’s an imperfect system with imperfect people.
Anonymous wrote:Love how mcps is immediately blamed. Hey parents- maybe you should have conversations with your kids about what is allowed and have them use their devices in the kitchen/living room where they can be monitored? Sure mcps can block sites but kids still figure out ways to access things they aren’t supposed to. So if it’s happening at home, is it really the systems fault?
Anonymous wrote:Parents and staff can request websites to be blocked by emailing helpdesk@mcpsmd.org
Years ago, schools would get a regular report when students repeatedly Google searched for red flagged topics. The report contained the student information and what was searched. I’m not sure if they do this anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Kids have learned how to circumvent the measures that MCPS put in place to block undesirable websites. Word has spread to even the youngest students. Principals do receive occasional reports from the tech office of the students who have been accessing websites they shouldn't have, so don't think that they don't know what is going on.
Kids think that the Chromebooks are "their" devices to do whatever they want with, as long as they are not at school. I've seen the look on student's faces when they are told that someone at MCPS can see every single thing they access or save to their drives; it's a look of sheer terror.
Parents need to emphasize to kids that the Chromebooks belong to the school system and that anything done on them is being watched! And yes, it is much better to buy the child a device yourself, and take measures to block sites that you don't want them to see, especially for elementary students!
Anonymous wrote:Get her your own computer or tablet. You cannot control MCPS one.