EVERY SIGNATURE MATTERS - THIS BILL MUST PASS!

EVERY SIGNATURE MATTERS - THIS BILL MUST PASS!
CLICK - GOAL - 100,000 NEW SIGNATURES! 75,000 SIGNATURES HAVE ALREADY BEEN SUBMITTED TO GOVERNOR CUOMO!

EFF Urges Court to Block Dragnet Subpoenas Targeting Online Commenters

EFF Urges Court to Block Dragnet Subpoenas Targeting Online Commenters
CLICK! For the full motion to quash: http://www.eff.org/files/filenode/hersh_v_cohen/UOJ-motiontoquashmemo.pdf

Wednesday, May 02, 2012

New York City Lays Out Social Media Rules for Teachers!

City Lays Out Digital Rules For Teachers

New York City on Monday issued its first guidelines for the use of social media in schools, stopping short of an outright ban but warning teachers to keep a bright line between personal and professional accounts.

New York unveiled guidelines for use of social media in schools, and the Department of Education is considering asking parents to sign consent forms before children participate in socia-media activities.
The Department of Education also is considering asking parents to sign consent forms before children participate in social-media activities and before their children's work or pictures appear online, and informing parents about how social media is being used in schools.

"In an increasingly digital world, we seek to provide our students with the opportunities that multi-media learning can provide—which is why we should allow and encourage the appropriate and accepted use of these powerful resources," schools Chancellor Dennis Walcott said in an e-mail to principals.

The city in May will start providing training sessions for teachers and spotlight examples of the best uses of social media in classrooms. In laying down the guidelines, the department is trying to balance free-speech rights and the educational benefits of online learning with the dangers it sees in teachers and students getting too comfortable in less-traditional settings.

"In this digital era, the lines between professional and personal endeavors are sometimes blurred," the guidelines say. Teachers should reject friend requests or other contact with students on their personal accounts, the guidelines say.

As the popularity of Facebook and Twitter has increased, so have the complaints about inappropriate student-teacher contact. The number of complaints received by the Special Commissioner of Investigation for schools that referenced Facebook leaped to 59 in 2010 from two in 2008, though they were not all substantiated.

After a series of arrests of education department employees on sexual-assault charges, Mr. Walcott spoke about how the department was reviewing its social-media policy and favored a total ban, but the department said the timing was unrelated. The guidelines have been in the works for about six months, department officials said.

Still, teachers have been disciplined for inappropriate comments, such as one who wrote that a student looked "sexy."

There aren't consequences for not abiding by the guidelines, as long as other department policies about appropriate conduct are followed, schools spokesman Matthew Mittenthal said.

"These are strong recommendations," he said.

Teachers will be told in no uncertain terms that their interactions with students online will be monitored. Employees "have no expectation of privacy" when using social media, the guidelines say. Principals or other supervisors are expected to keep a list of all school-related social media accounts, monitor them regularly and report any "questionable" behavior.

They're also asked to use common sense.

"If a particular type of behavior is inappropriate in the classroom or a professional workplace, then that behavior is also inappropriate on the professional social media site," the guidelines say.

The guidelines also tell teachers to steer clear of looking at students' personal Facebook pages.

Some teachers have said they have flagged emotional or other problems with their students through what they've read on Facebook. Department officials said they understood that teachers care about the entire student and want to make sure they're doing well, but students need their own space and parents have made clear they aren't looking for co-parents.

Courtenaye Jackson-Chase, who will soon take over as the department's head lawyer, said city officials understand that teachers care about the entire student and want to make sure they're doing well, but students need their own space and parents have said "pretty loud and clear they're not looking for teachers to be co-parents."

Some teachers interviewed said the guidelines were fair.

"That all sounds reasonable to me," said Chris Casal, a computer teacher at Public School 10 in Brooklyn, who maintains an individual, professional Twitter account along with one for his school. "I'm not going to do something that's going to jeopardize the way people view me as an educator."

Mr. Casal said that because he works in an elementary school, he generally keeps in touch with parents more often than students. He said he feels Twitter has helped him stay at the top of his game by collecting and sharing links to relevant school news, resources and computer tips.

New York City, the largest school system in the country, is following a growing wave of districts that have implemented online guidelines, often in the wake of scandal.

Mr. Walcott said he wanted to make sure teachers didn't take the risk of saying something that could be misinterpreted.

Darrell M. West, a Brookings Institution vice president, said the new guidelines make it appear that the department is thinking only about the downsides of social media and protecting itself. "It sounds like best practices on how to avoid getting sued, as opposed to thinking about how to use social media to broaden the learning experience," he said. "We all know there has been bad behavior enabled by social media, but we shouldn't make policy based on extreme cases."

Department officials pointed to the upcoming training sessions as examples of how they were going beyond simply protecting themselves.

Richard Condon, the Special Commissioner of Investigation for schools, said what teachers were doing was more important than how they were doing it.

"I am not concerned with policy, I'm concerned with content," he said. "...If a teacher is dealing with a student through social media and it's within the bounds of the teacher-student relationship, and it's related to school and all that, I have no comment on that."

VIDEO & MORE: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303916904577376541510305510.html?mod=WSJ_NY_MIDDLETopStories#project%3DWSJPDF%26s%3Ddocid%253D120501040021-d09d61391884434caaad2041f5b2700c%257Cfile%253Dsocial_media_guidelines%26articleTabs%3Darticle

1 comment:

Spaced out BT said...

The organizational mindset is always bent on covering itself legally.