If A High School Fears Blogging, What Lesson Is It Teaching Students?
from the how-dare-you-communicate! dept
Isn't it great that our high schools are teaching students to fear new things? It's nothing new, of course. When I was in high school, there was a minor controversy over the fact that Walkmans were banned from the school. The principal declared that it was the biggest threat facing our education -- despite the very real drug problem and disturbing weapons problem (this was before metal detectors were common on school grounds) students faced. So, the talk last week about schools banning iPods didn't seem all that new. It's just the same thing, updated for a new technology. Ignore the real problem (drugs and weapons are still making their way into schools) and focus on something that's easy to spot: white headphones. However, sometimes this fear of the "new" goes to bizarre extremes. While it's not quite as bad as the various headlines and coverage suggest, there is a school in New Jersey that seems to fear blogging. The headline claims that the school has "banned blogging," but it's really just blocking a particular blogging site (not named). The problem is the reasoning: "blogging is not an educational use of school computers." While the importance of "blogging" specifically is overhyped, teaching students how to better use technology to communicate is an important skill -- and one that blogging does provide. The fact that a blogging site is banned from the school won't stop the kids from blogging -- but it does make the whole activity that much more enticing for them, without any supervision. If the school were smart, it would be encouraging blogging, while teaching kids to understand both the risks and the benefits of communicating online. Instead, the lesson the kids are learning is that pretending something doesn't exist or isn't "educational" is the proper way to react to something you don't understand.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Quite.
As if we didn't see enough people with "grounded personality type" (by any other name) in _Bowling for Columbine_...
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Not as bad as it sounds
I don't think it's necessarily wrong to say, "No, you can't do this from school, it's not safe," because of the specific idiom of the site itself. If this were kids putting thoughts up or nonspecific journal entries, it would be overkill.
What the school should have done is organize a lesson on personal security on the internet too, but this may be a stopgap solution and that may be something they're going to do soon.
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The Nagasaki Precedent
You may understand why schools would want to distance themselves from blogs, when they become conduits for bullying.
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Re: The Nagasaki Precedent
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Re: The Nagasaki Precedent
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Re: The Nagasaki Precedent
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Re: The Nagasaki Precedent
Lets be clear:
The crime that was committed was the slitting of the throat, not the blogging.
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Brownsville Station
Sitting in the classroom
thinking it's a drag.
Listening to the teacher
well just aint my bag.
The noon bells ring
you know that's my cue.
I'm gonna meet the boys
on floor number two
Bloggin' in the Boys Room, Yes indeed, I was
Bloggin' in the Boys Room
Now teacher don't you fill me up with your rules.
Everybody knows that
Blogging ain't allowed in school.
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