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Blair Peterson

How to avoid committing social media gaffes | Community | eSchoolNews.com - 0 views

  • Develop guidelines for use and share with your staff. Update your acceptable-use policy as well as personnel policies to reflect the district’s position on appropriate use of social networking sites. For ideas, check out the Social Media Guidelines for Schools wiki (http://socialmediaguidelines.pbworks.com). Many of the ideas presented here are adapted from this resource, which is meant to be shared and expanded as new information becomes available.
  • reate an official site for your school or district. To protect others’ privacy, set it up as a fan page so people can post comments or become a fan without giving you access to their personal pages. Commit staff time or resources to daily updates. Keep the tone conversational, but represent your organization and your position respectfully and responsibly. According to Pew Research, “44 percent of online adults have searched for information about someone whose services or advice they seek in a professional capacity.”
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    Article on social media use in schools. There are two suggestions for developing policies for social media use. You have to have an account with eSchool News to see the entire article.
Blair Peterson

Executive Summary | Pew Internet & American Life Project - 2 views

  • we find that ownership of a mobile phone and participation in a variety of internet activities are associated with larger and more diverse core discussion networks. (Discussion networks are a key measure of people’s most important social ties.)
  • having discussion networks that are more likely to contain people from different backgrounds.
  • For instance, frequent internet users, and those who maintain a blog are much more likely to confide in someone who is of another race.
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  • such as Facebook in particular are associated with having a more diverse social network.
  • Cell phone users, those who use the internet frequently at work, and bloggers are more likely to belong to a local voluntary association, such as a youth group or a charitable organization.
  • However, we find some evidence that use of social networking services (e.g., Facebook, MySpace, LinkedIn) substitutes for some neighborhood involvement.
  • Rather, it is associated with engagement in places such as parks, cafes, and restaurants, the kinds of locales where research shows that people are likely to encounter a wider array of people and diverse points of view. I
  • Challenging the assumption that internet use encourages social contact across vast distances, we find that many internet technologies are used as much for local contact as they are for distant communication.
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    The executive summary or a report on new technology use in the US.
Blair Peterson

"How Do [They] Even Do That?" Myths and Facts About the Impact of Technology on the Liv... - 2 views

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    This is US data.
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    I wonder how Graded's students compare.
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