Skip to main content

Home/ Jaxonenglish/ Group items tagged Privacy

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Melissa Morrison

Identity Construction and Self-Representation on Facebook - 1 views

  •  
    Users share a commonality in the various ways they represent themselves on Facebook. These vary from the way people structure their privacy settings, to the way they represent themselves through their pictures, to what groups they identify with, and how they define themselves through text on their profile pages. It is something which when analyzed can be recognized as constructed in order to portray the desired image of each individual. With a Facebook page you use its different features to create yourself from nothing and in heart design yourself. The freedom that the virtual world provides allows people to construct their identity in any way they wish. With the freedom of constructing identity in multiple ways comes the freedom to socialize in multiple ways. Therefore, Facebook is a space where people may construct and share their identities, rather than being just a platform where one "'keeps in touch."
Azucena Carrillo

Using the Technology of Today, in the Classroom Today - 1 views

  •  
    In "using the technology of today, in the classroom of today" authors Eric Klopfer, Scot Osterweil, Jennifer Groff, Jason Haas start to give basis to the argument that technologies such as videogames and social networking sites help shape learning. They focus on how they are learning outside of school but in completely different ways than teachers focus on. They argue, "Nearly all institutions- business, industry, medicine, science and government - have harnessed aspects of these technologies for decades. Games and simulations have been a key component of training doctors and military personnel, but even businesses like PricewaterhouseCoopers used a game about a mining company in outer space to teach its employees about derivatives. Although that may seem a bit "off the wall," the fact is major corporations, the Department of Defense, and the medical community would not use these tools if they were not highly effective" to illustrate how corporations use videogames so the educational system shouldn't reject it them as a learning tool. They point out how videogames can serve as a simulation for real life just as mining in outer space can teach about derivatives. Videogames are also a highly interactive learning environment. Instead of being told information, students are right in the middle of the action and the learning. They also discuss how social networking is a new way of collaborating with other about a wide variety of subjects including school work. The authors write, "Of course, educators have long been aware that learning is a social activity, where learners construct their understanding not just through interaction with the material, but also through collaboratively constructing new knowledge with their peers" but teachers reject the use of social networking as means of learning because of the other aspects included safety or privacy. But what teachers can learn from social sites is that "'knowledge cultures' assembled in these o
  •  
    This article is very rich with information that has to do with how digital games, social networks, and simulations can be involved in classrooms. With the involvement of them is more than just entertainment that children or people actually learn stuff from them.
August Walsh

Facebook in the Classroom - 1 views

  •  
    This author makes many arguments like the author does in my second Annotation. For example, he or she describes or teachers should create a separate Facebook profile for their work from their personal life in order to help manage privacy settings. Keeping a separate profile helps teachers keep their personal lives private.
Dana Saunders

Why Youth Love Social Networking Sites: The Role of Networked Publics in Teenage Social... - 4 views

  •  
    In the article "Why Youth Love Social Networking Sites", Danah Boyd writes about Social network sites like MySpace and Facebook create a bridge for your social life and online life. Her article examines how these students use Social Networking websites to interact with their peers. She also addresses the issue of privacy and how it can be altered with in a social networking setting.
  • ...1 more comment...
  •  
    In the article Why Youth ♥ Social Network Sites: The Role of Networked Publics in Teenage Social Life, danah boyd writes about the relationship with teenagers and social networking sites. In her article, boyd states, "In a study conducted in late 2006, they found that 55 percent of online teens aged twelve to seventeen have created profiles on social network sites with 64 percent of teens aged fifteen to seventeen." So, her question is why? Why are all these teens creating these sites and what are they using it for? In this article danah boyd will tell you about why these teens are creating these sites, and why the other teens are not creating sites.
  •  
    This article the author talks about how the different social networking sites have brought students together. A place where they can communicate with their peers and meet others. She addresses that fact that it allows the public to gather.
  •  
    In the article Why Youth Love Social Network Sites: The Role of Networked Publics in Teenage Social Life by Danah Boyd is all about the way social networking sites work and how that connects to a person's real-life identity. Or in other words, how a person can form his or her own identity through social networking.
Daniel Ramirez Lara

Taking risky opportunities in youthful content creation: teenagers' use of social netwo... - 0 views

  •  
    In this article they have studies found that individuals tended to engage in role-play games and anit normative behaviors in the online world. They have studies that have examined identity performance in less anonymous online settings such as internet dating sites and reported different findings. The newest study investigates identity construction on facebook.
tsiurabe vazquez

"If You Can't Protect What You Own, You Don't Own Anything": Piracy, Privacy, and Publi... - 0 views

  •  
    Because of piracy, movie directors, the cast, and everyone that is involved in making th film don't get the profit they deserve.
Mai Tong Thao

Are social media changing religion? - 0 views

  •  
    As Americans embrace the extroverted world of Facebook and blogs, churches are trying to keep up. Indeed, holy places are becoming centers for social life, for group therapy, for sharing. But in losing our privacy, are we losing our religion, too?
Monica Aceves

Say Everything - 0 views

  •  
    "As younger people reveal their private lives on the Internet, the older generation looks on with alarm and misapprehension not seen since the early days of rock and roll. The future belongs to the uninhibited."
1 - 8 of 8
Showing 20 items per page