Sunday, November 17, 2013

A Cyberbulling Video Project

Cyberbullying is a national problem, most people have been cyberbullied, been the cyberbullies or known someone who has been cyberbullied. The anonymity of the internet sometimes allows people to feel as though they can say anything they want on the internet without fearing the consequences. The thing about cyber-bullying is that those who are cyber-bullied can not escape the torment. They are taunted on Facebook, through blogs and message boards, even cell phones are no longer safe.

October is national bullying prevention month and I believe this is a perfect time to start a month long campaign against cyberbullying. During the month of October the librarian can display poems and posters around the school and in classrooms discussing the issue of bullying. In addition, during the announcments the librarian will share inspiring short videos that discuss the impacts and horrors of bullying.  However, I would also take it one step further and encourage students to make come to the library to make their own short videos about why and how we should stop cyberbullying. While I would also encourage students to write poems or create posters, I think that actually seeing a video can have a very large impact. For example, during my fieldwork, I talked to a librarian who wanted to show the spoken word poem by Shane Koyczan entitled "To This Day" (check out the video below). Just watching this video had a huge impact on me and made me want to stand up and stop bullying. In addition, today the bullies are not the only problem, it is also the bystanders. The students, teachers, parents, etc who see the bulling happen, but just turn a blind eye because it is "kids being kids." As a librarian I want to not only to let my students know that cyberbullying is wrong and that it has consequences, but also empower students to stand up against bullies and to report actions of bullies to an adult. I think that this video project and help do just that. The videos will be shown to the whole school and at the end of the month, students will come to the library to sign a pledge against bullying.

Sunday, November 10, 2013

Blocked...is filtering really the answer?


I have seen it plenty of times before, talked about it with other teachers and experienced it myself. You have a wonderful idea for a new lesson, it involves getting on a website. Perhaps you are having your students go on the website, perhaps you are just trying to show a video or perhaps you are having your students create new content. But, once at school you try to load up the website and bam...it is blocked. You sit back and ask yourself now what?

The question to filter or not to filter has been bouncing back and forth in the education world for as long as the internet has became a serious resource in student's education. On one hand, the internet is an amazing resource that can provide a wealth of information that will allow students to become better learners. On the other hand, the internet can provide a wealth of information that is not appropriate for students whatsoever. So how do we rectify this conundrum?

While I appreciate that filtering may hurt student's abilities to understand if a website is really good or bad ( for example, how do you find out if a website is bad if you are only presented with good websites to choose from). However, I don't think a lack of filters is the answer. Let's face it, there is material on the internet that is not appropriate for students and there is material on the internet that is not educational and shouldn't be used when student's should be learning. Filter's do have their place in schools, as they can help protect students. Nevertheless, there needs to be a system or a process where websites can be unblocked if they are deemed suitable for educational use by a teacher or a librarian. While most school's have processes like this, they often take forever and are can be such a hassle that teachers and librarians simply decide not to try to get the website unblocked in the first place. I believe that if a teacher thinks a website should be unblocked they should be able to go to the Principal and the librarian, present their case and have the site unblocked within a day or so. The librarian should be involved because he or she is an information specialist who understands how to evaluate websites. Furthermore, I think it might be effective to have a filter committee meet before the beginning of the school year and discuss what new educational websites are available and what changes might need to be made to the filter. Websites that were once considered non-educational may now be used for educational purposes. For example, I know when Facebook first came out many schools blocked it because it was considered not educational; however, now many schools are unblocking Facebook because teachers are using is in classrooms for educational purposes.

Filtering is never perfect. Often information is blocked that shouldn't be blocked and just as often, information is not blocked that should be blocked. Perhaps having less of a filter might be more effective, or it might not. Regardless, it is important to have a clear procedure set up to get websites unblocked. Teachers and students shouldn't suffer by having to wait forever to access a website.