Monday, April 9, 2007

How do we teach kids to cross a busy street?

It seems that everywhere I turn lately, I find educators struggling over how to responsibly move forward with the use of Web 2.0 tools in an educational setting. Ed-tech leader, Ed Barry, recently asked Vermont colleagues to share what PROCESS they use in deciding which tools to allow in their schools? Most of the answers offered referred to the school’s Acceptable Use Policies, with many of us agreeing that our AUP’s need updating. I walked away from this meeting eager to research AUP’s that supported a School 2.0 environment and the process used to design them. The insightful post and comments I collected on the topic, left me with more questions than answers. So instead of a summary, I offer you a list of questions that these writers touch on, and invite you to peruse their insight and share your own thoughts.



  • How do we teach kids to cross a busy street?

  • How can we support an institution with desires to seek innovation in teaching, learning and research; willingness to innovate & a growing culture of sharing?

  • How can schools ensure that they are fulfilling their duty of care to ensure safe environments for their students?

  • How do we promote a culture of social responsibility?

  • Must we reach beyond Acceptable Use Policies?

  • How do schools make and enforce rules when students are not on school ground or acting as part of a school function?

  • Should our AUP’s reflect understanding of changes in our culture?
    Should AUP support us to change our culture?

  • How do your AUP's integrate IT policies with Institutional policies?

  • What key principles are your AUP’s based on?

  • What is the best approach to deploying risk assessment and risk management ? What legal risk do schools face?

  • Is your AUP used as a control mechanism to prevent usage which IT staff may frown upon?

  • Does your AUP work on behalf of your organization in helping to ensure the effective use of IT by its users?

  • Why do we hide behind AUP’s?Where did our policy come from? Is it infallible?

  • What mechanism do you have for changing your AUP and engaging your users in that change?

  • How does it take into account the facts that technologies change, usage changes, and culture changes?

  • Is your AUP simple or sophisticated enough to accommodate for technical and organizational complexities we face in the 21st century?

  • Should we wait to evaluate and master immature technologies before permitting them?

  • How can we provide safe environments, minimize risk, allow learning and encourage enthusiast?

  • How can we develop policies around technologies that are a massive productivity enhancer and also a great time sink?

  • How can schools fulfill their duty of care to ensure safe environments for their students?

  • Can AUP’s guide us towards an agreed role and agreed manner of operation for that role?

  • Can AUP’s keep up with the fast pace of emerging tools and uses of these technologies (i.e. recording capabilities of cell phones and other economically accessible tools)

  • Should time tested principles such as ETHICS be at the center of our acceptable use policies?

  • How do we involve students in the process of updating AUP’s?

  • How do we promote a culture of social responsibility? Must we reach beyond Acceptable Use Policies? (repeated for emphasis)

    Image Credit: http://www.flickr.com/photos/ereiam_j_h/354525742/

5 comments:

  1. I love this analogy, Lucie. Crossing a street is necessary, just as is learning to be a digital citizen. Let's teach our kids to navigate the world they live in rather than banning them from every potentially useful resource!

    ReplyDelete
  2. SLC sounds good, but i dont know what it its, its sounds close to TLC - tender loving care....?

    by the way, my 8 year old knows how to cros a street, but doesnt yet get allowed out there on his own... maybe thats good for SLC and digital learning.

    one good thing about internet, it can be used for self paced one-one learning and exploration - so maybe small groups are the answer - teach people ( unemployed adults?) to act as facilitators, and then get them to run small group learning centres and watch the kids screens to ensure they dont get "run over"

    ReplyDelete
  3. That Warcraft spam is just too funny, sorry (I regularly have to delete mysterious new comments on my blog too...so I feel your pain).

    On to the subject at hand, AUP has always done a great job of defining good and bad browsing; but a great AUP also teaches responsibility, information literacy, while still giving students a voice and the flexibility to discover on their own. My mother always had a weird thing about perverts hiding in a library back when I was a kid...but she still made me go.

    Now that students are routinely creating content, tossing in a bit of civics and social responsibility is just as important. If we are going to stretch the crossing the street metaphor...are our students painting the crosswalk in some cases?

    ReplyDelete
  4. wow gold cheap wow gold world of warcraft gold to our loyal reliable customers.

    ReplyDelete