My last post provided practical tips to help teachers manage the integration of Web 2.0 tools in the classroom. An invitation to pioneering educators to share their strategies generated a wealth of resources for teachers aspiring to use these tools. Thank you Ms. Mercer for referring us to Scott McCleod’s Moving Forward Blog. Greg’s 10 steps to help teachers to use these tools themselves before asking kids and Clay’s 10 must have Web 2.0 accounts are a great complement to Andrew’s Web 2.0 Tutorial for teachers and Barbara’s prolific perspective as a school administrator on her Dare to Dream Blog.
I’d like to offer a very special thanks to Candace for turning me on to Teachers First –which not only offers some very practical tips for first time teachers but also maintains an incredible database and review of web 2.0 tools specifically aimed towards teachers who “want to try tools but cannot envision the how and why.” This one goes right at the TOP of my recommendations for all teachers starting their journey towards School 2.0.
As promised, here are just a couple more tips that I’ve found to help you proceed on this journey.
Read the terms of service of the tools you would like to use. These terms are often difficult to sift through, and I’ve been guilty of reading them too quickly. When in doubt contact the company and ask for clarification. (Example: In some cases, where it is not acceptable for a 12 year old to create their own account on a system, it might be acceptable for them to use a teacher’s account within a supervised classroom environment.)
- Take some time to get familiar with the legal parameters that schools must comply with. Make sure someone in your school truly understands CIPA, COPPA, and FERPA and that the conversations that guide the development of policies, practices, and procedures in schools relating to Internet use is not based on fear and misconception. Much needed teacher voice is sometime lacking in this process. After reading this FAQ from SafeWiredSchools and similar information sources, I became more confident in my ability to make responsible professional decisions about classroom management strategies that used Web 2.0 tools.
CIPA is the Children's Internet Protection Act, and was passed in late 2000. It requires schools and libraries receiving certain types of federal funding to filter or block Internet access to "visual depictions" of material that is obscene, child pornography, and when minors are using the computer, material that is harmful to minors.
COPPA is the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act, and was passed in 1998. It requires commercial Web sites oriented to minors to get parental permission to collect personally identifiable information from children under age 13.
Your school’s legal advisor should be able to clarify ambiguity, and offer support and protection for educators seeking to use web 2.0 tools. - Create a classroom set of logins for your favorite Web 2.0 tool that you as a teacher keeps control of for your class. Google Certified Teacher, Kyle Brumbaugh, sent me this video tutorial he found in Google Certified Teacher Forums that allows teachers to easily create classrooms sets of logins without creating new emails for most Web 2.0 tools. However, I can't see a way to avoid creating a new gmail account to access Google docs for a each member of my class. Yet, this method did allow me to create those student accounts quickly using my teacher gmail account as the "required" alternate email account. As a teacher, I consider myself to be the one entering into a partnership with Google (not the students) and I would only do this with a group of students where I was willing to accept the responsibility for supervising my students' behavior. I would also take the additional precaution of setting up a forward rule on each student gmail account, so that all mail gets forwarded to my teacher account. You can then use the "filter" method suggested in the video tutorial to keep this mail organized.
A big thanks to readers who came forth with such wonderful resources to encourage our colleagues who are almost ready to take the plunge. Keep those ideas coming; readers like J. Allen are particularly looking for those strategies that work for younger children.
P.S. In an upcoming post, I’d like to feature educators who have found Google Apps for Your Domain, the key to classroom management in a Web 2.0 world. Drop me a comment if this tool has worked well for you.
Tip #3 is awesome! Thanks for passing it along.
ReplyDeleteI'm with you on the younger kids' logins on Google itself. I have a number of 6th graders who need accounts so they can be Blogger authors.
For now, I'm using a parent's email to get the Google account. I share the Google account user name and password with the parent and encourage their active involvement in the student's account.
The plus-sign solution that works everywhere else but Google is such an awesome solution. I would love to see Google allow teachers to use it on their accounts, too.
This is terrific. It helps me think my way through the particulars of shared user identities for classroom accounts. I look forward to reading more of you blog posts, Lucie.
ReplyDeleteThanks for pulling these resources together! I'm in a high school with 40 new teachers to our county (with a 1 to 1 initiative). You have saved me a great deal of time!
ReplyDeleteOur ISD recently switched to using Google Apps for Your Domain. We are using it for everything from email to apps to add-ons. We just made the switch as a district two weeks ago, but a handful of us have been using it for a few months now. We have written grants collaboratively using Docs as well as sharing some other files. Shoot me an email if you have any questions. Maybe we can help out.
ReplyDeleteHi. My 1º comment and visit. The post is atractive, ITM too, i really apreciate your iniciative. But... Allways a "but"! The socio-economical context where i work is so different: i teach in schools where the students don't eat every day (lit.). The unique computer (if there is a computer) is in the director´s room, and is intouchable. When i read about the 1º world resources, it seems me like a bad joke. Our kids goes to schools like who goes to prision, and i too. It's sad to see how many kids will never have access to these tools or almost nothing, and there are many particularly lucid, believe me. Je: however, they are going to "ciberbares" and used with any dexterity the chat, looking youtube videos, prepare their blogs. Nobody taught and they learned, despite so much adversity. Regards from around Buenos Aires. Thanks for your job.
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