We are exploring the idea of turning off the filters and teaching our
students to be responsible and safe digital citizens.  What is your
opinion?  Is anyone out there allowing their students to have
unfiltered internet access?

Views: 5

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

I would be very weary about completely turning off the filter. There is a lot of really bad stuff out there that I don't really want students of any age seeing. For me, it's not a matter of "students will run across this one day so we might as well be here to guide them." It's a matter of it just not being appropriate. I would run the same filter in my house (which i do) even if I didn't have a child in the house. I just don't want to deal with it.

That being said, being open to outside tools and information is great, and I would encourage you and your school to be open to the possibilities. At the same time, I encourage your school to come up with regular opportunities for students to use various sites for work in school. Just opening things up is not enough. As you mentioned, teaching is the other half of the equation. I think this is the best way to prepare good digital citizens.
Hi Rick,

We don't filter at all- it is a board policy not to, we believe in teaching responsible digital citizenship and emphasize classroom management. Truthfully, it is working out beautifully. I think because it is open the temptation to do something "forbidden" has withered away.

Our greatest challenge now is how to take the fullest advantage of being open and unfiltered because there are so many possibilities! :)


Kelley
At our school we went back and forth on this issue. At first I felt that, as a school, we it would be more responsible to filter thereby protecting our students from inappropriate material. Then after a great deal of thought it made sense that it was being more responsible not to filter and, as the guides to student learning, use non-filtering as a learning opportunity. Inappropriate content exists, whether we want to be bothered with it or not. I feel it is more responsible to help students face inappropriate material and guide them through the process of questioning the content what they may discover and will definitely be exposed to at some point. We are fooling ourselves if we think that not facing it makes it non-existent.
What a debatable issue! Our district uses filters, although when it comes to blogging, wikis, and podcasts, I am definitely a novice, so I am not sure how extensive our filters really are. In a text I am reading for a class, Blogs, Wikis, Podcasts and Other Powerful Web Tools for Classrooms, the author Will Richardson suggests having districts block only some of the large Weblog sites like blogspot.com or xanga.com or myspace.com. This of course is a double-edged sword, as millions of questionable sites will be blocked from student access; however, this also eliminates many appropriate sites.

I was wondering if your district requires parents to sign a permission slip or letter explaining the terms and conditions of the project and how to utilize sites appropriately. If so, do you think removing the filters completely will result in an increase of parents NOT willing to sign a permission slip for their child? Also, when a student does not have written permission to publish on the Internet, etc., what modifications do you make for their assignments?

Thanks for addressing this issue,
Casi
So what does your "responsible digital citizenship" look like? Does it include some type of student training/inculcation?

Kelley Schwartz said:
Hi Rick,

We don't filter at all- it is a board policy not to, we believe in teaching responsible digital citizenship and emphasize classroom management. Truthfully, it is working out beautifully. I think because it is open the temptation to do something "forbidden" has withered away.

Our greatest challenge now is how to take the fullest advantage of being open and unfiltered because there are so many possibilities! :)


Kelley
My District uses filters but is very open to fulfilling specific requests for sites that teachers want to use.From request to open site can usually be done within 30 minutes (often less). I do not think we would ever open up EVERYTHING, but knowing that I can get it open quickly and easily if I need to get to a site either for students to use or for staff development, seems to be working for me.
What types of filters do you recommend?

Brian Mull said:
I would be very weary about completely turning off the filter. There is a lot of really bad stuff out there that I don't really want students of any age seeing. For me, it's not a matter of "students will run across this one day so we might as well be here to guide them." It's a matter of it just not being appropriate. I would run the same filter in my house (which i do) even if I didn't have a child in the house. I just don't want to deal with it.

That being said, being open to outside tools and information is great, and I would encourage you and your school to be open to the possibilities. At the same time, I encourage your school to come up with regular opportunities for students to use various sites for work in school. Just opening things up is not enough. As you mentioned, teaching is the other half of the equation. I think this is the best way to prepare good digital citizens.
I have been very impressed with what I have heard about the filter Lightspeed Systems produces. It's highly manageable, protects mobile computers off and on campus, and has a special feature that gives students access to approved YouTube videos and other Web 2.0 material within an area called My Big Campus. I encourage you to take a look at the demo.

http://www.lightspeedsystems.com/resources/Lightspeed_TTC_Demo.html

Of course with any filter in a school, I think it is important that we trust teachers enough to give them the ability to override the filter as needed. Having teachers wait minutes, hours or days to have someone else approve a request to override a filter just isn't acceptable. Teachers need access to the material they need when they need it.

Debbie Kelley said:
What types of filters do you recommend?

Brian Mull said:
I would be very weary about completely turning off the filter. There is a lot of really bad stuff out there that I don't really want students of any age seeing. For me, it's not a matter of "students will run across this one day so we might as well be here to guide them." It's a matter of it just not being appropriate. I would run the same filter in my house (which i do) even if I didn't have a child in the house. I just don't want to deal with it.

That being said, being open to outside tools and information is great, and I would encourage you and your school to be open to the possibilities. At the same time, I encourage your school to come up with regular opportunities for students to use various sites for work in school. Just opening things up is not enough. As you mentioned, teaching is the other half of the equation. I think this is the best way to prepare good digital citizens.

Reply to Discussion

RSS

From the NL Blog

Why More Schools Aren’t Teaching Web Literacy—and How They Can Start

Fourteen years after writing Teaching Zack to Think, there is still no Internet skill more critical than Web literacy. However, simply teaching students to be able to search for and validate information is not enough. The ever-growing amount of information on the Web and the immediate access to experts and peers from around the world [...]

Flipped Learning: A Response to Five Common Criticisms

Alan November and Brian Mull have recently written an article titled Flipped Learning: A Response to Five Common Criticisms which now appears on the  eSchool News site. Within the article, they explain how to deepen student learning using the Flipped Learning method, and they also address criticisms this method has received. You are invited to read [...]

BLC is an incubator of great ideas

Last spring, at the end of a full day of keynotes and presentations at BLC 11, @ewanmcintosh @dkuropatwa, a few others and I hit Beantown for refreshments and a kick at the day’s notes. The idea of problem-finding, of asking question to which no one knows the answers, emerged as a new model for pedagogy. [...]

BLC11 Keynote: Rob Evans

Today, we are launching our second BLC11 keynote video with Rob Evans, clinical and organizational psychologist and the Executive Director of the Human Relations Service in Wellesley, Massachusetts. As you watch the keynote, we encourage you to reflect on and respond to the following questions. Rob Evans shared that for transformation to take place, there [...]

Webinar with Alan November and Dr. Eric Mazur

This is a very special episode of our podcast series. It’s an archived recording of our first of what we hope will be many live webinars complete with audience Q&A at the end. In this conversation, Alan talks again to Dr. Eric Mazur, Area Dean of Applied Physics at Harvard University and 2011 Building Learning [...]

Badge

Loading…

© 2012   Created by Brian Mull.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service