Anonymous wrote:Story on the news tonight: Deonte Carraway in Prince George's county worked as at Judge Sylvania Woods Elementary School and shot over 40 child porn videos during the school day on school grounds after using the kik app to contact students.
http://www.nbcwashington.com/news/local/School-Volunteer-Accused-Child-Pornography-368084291.html
Schools should have a policy against student use of apps like kik for school work.
Anonymous wrote:Can you provide a suggestion for how to enforce such a policy?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you provide a suggestion for how to enforce such a policy?
Sure. If it comes to the teacher's attention that a collaborative school assignment was completed with the use of anonymous social media or other unsafe social media repeatedly used by child predators including kik, (others), that assignment will be revoked and given a score of zero.
I mean, it's kind of hard to enforce schools' policies against plagiarism, too. If a kid plagiarizes his grandfather's book report that's been in a cabinet for 50 years, he likely won't get caught. There's no way to know. But schools don't say that because there are times we won't know when kids are breaking the school policy, we just won't have a school policy on plagiarism. Schools have a policy, they make sure that kids know what the rules, why breaking the rules is wrong, and what the consequences for breaking the rules would be, and schools do their best to enforce the policy.
What's would be so awful about having a similar policy against using anonymous social media on school projects? Why are you against it?
Anonymous wrote:I am a teacher. At my school, we specify that students must use their google accounts to collaborate.
Anonymous wrote:Can you provide a suggestion for how to enforce such a policy?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But if a teacher assigns a group project and some of the class decides to handle communications via anonymous social networking sites that have, in other cases resulted in group bullying and suicide and murder, isn't that something the teacher and/or the school should be aware of so they can develop a policy?
Like, if a teacher were requiring kids to collect igneous rocks during their free time, and it turned out a bunch of kids were collecting them from active railroad tracks, you'd want to tell the teacher so that she could reassess the danger of the assignment she was giving or give instructions about what sources kids could use.
Maybe in this case it wasn't clear to the teacher that the kids would be using social networking to do the assignment? In that case I could understand the position that the teacher shouldn't be involved at all. Except that in this day it seems like whenever you ask tweens and teens to get together outside of class, it will probably involve social networking sites or texting.
Do most people really feel that schools shouldn't have policies on kids' use of these sites to do schoolwork? I can understand just handling a one-off situation as a parent to get through the assignment, but do you think it's wrong, in the longer term, to ask teachers and schools to think about making policies on these sites?
Schools can have all the policies they want, but it is up to kids to decide what they do on their own time. Suggesting that a teacher not do a project because it requires outside collaboration that kids could choose to use a method of communication not regulated by the school seems like a stretch. As a teacher, if parents told me of a situation like this, I can encourage students to use the school-provided tool, but I don't see them outside of my classroom and have no right to look at their personal devices. Parents, however, do.
As communicating outside our safety nets becomes increasingly easy, parents should keep a close watch on how their kids are connecting with others.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:8 kids in a group is huge. I teach MS and would never assign such a large group. 4 is more typical. Occasionally, when I am able to directly monitor work in the classroom, I have assigned groups of 5-6. But in 16 years of teaching, I've never heard of putting 13-14 year olds in such a big group. That's a lot of "workers" for the group leader to manage. I'd speak with the teacher about that as well. She needs a better system of selecting collaborative groups than simply dividing her class into thirds.
Translation: OP's kid is a lying liar who lies.
In hindsight, I think she may have been using this to explain a potentially low grade (which did not happen; she got a 100 on the assignment).
How did she get a 100 on a group assignment when she was unable to work with her group? Did the group members just put her name on the finished product?
Anonymous wrote:But if a teacher assigns a group project and some of the class decides to handle communications via anonymous social networking sites that have, in other cases resulted in group bullying and suicide and murder, isn't that something the teacher and/or the school should be aware of so they can develop a policy?
Like, if a teacher were requiring kids to collect igneous rocks during their free time, and it turned out a bunch of kids were collecting them from active railroad tracks, you'd want to tell the teacher so that she could reassess the danger of the assignment she was giving or give instructions about what sources kids could use.
Maybe in this case it wasn't clear to the teacher that the kids would be using social networking to do the assignment? In that case I could understand the position that the teacher shouldn't be involved at all. Except that in this day it seems like whenever you ask tweens and teens to get together outside of class, it will probably involve social networking sites or texting.
Do most people really feel that schools shouldn't have policies on kids' use of these sites to do schoolwork? I can understand just handling a one-off situation as a parent to get through the assignment, but do you think it's wrong, in the longer term, to ask teachers and schools to think about making policies on these sites?