Session 9: Ethical, Safe and Appropriate Use of Information

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Session 9: Ethical, Safe and Appropriate Use of Information

                                                                                                                                  

Source: John Grisham Cartoons.http://www.cartoonstock.com/directory/j/john_grisham.asp

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Located in Session 9 Folder

Focusing Questions

What new ethical challenges has our digital age brought about?

How do we teach students ethical behavior as it relates to school and technology?

Materials in this workshop are based on presentations and publications of

Doug JohnsonDirector of Technology, Mankato MN Schools

and

Nancy WillardDirector,

Center for Safe and Responsible Internet Use

Instruction

Framing Our Work

We’ve all seen the headlines…

Framing Our Work

We don’t have to go further than our libraries and classrooms to see the ethical problems.

+ =

“..yo, what she said about him was…”

Framing Our Work

Our students come face-to-face with ethical issues on a daily basis.

Framing Our Work

Most of us – adults or children – would not consider walking into a store and stealing a music CD or a software program.

Framing Our Work

Yet, many people don’t think twice about downloading music without paying for it, or installing “borrowed’ software programs on their computers.

Framing Our Work

The fact is, many of us have differing ethical behaviors, and different ethical standards, for the real world, and the virtual world, the online world of computers and cyberspace.

Framing Our Work

Why do we need to address technology-related ethical issues in our schools?

Because unethical behavior in the virtual world has real-world consequences.

Framing Our Work

We’ll look atNew ethical challenges Teaching opportunities

Teaching

Real World v. Virtual World• Mail• Telephone• Keys• Passing notes• File cabinet• Accepting rides from a

stranger• Meetings• Tape recording• Playdates

• E-mail• Internet phone/IM• Passwords• Texting• Online file storage• Accepting invitations

from an online “friend”• Blogs and Wikis • Podcasts• Social Spaces

But their sense of what is right and wrong doesn’t always move so smoothly between the two….

Lack of tangible feedback

Sense of Invisibility

In the Virtual World

Rationales

Finger of Blame

He asked for it!

She started

it!!

Follow the Crowd

No harm …

Little bit…

Good Intentions

http://www.costumecraze.com/MEDI02.html?PHPSESSID=18cd1860e18174a86f8748a354375adf

No consequences…

It’s a new world…

Teacher and pupil. H. Armstrong Roberts, photographer. From the American Memory Collection America from the Great Depression to World War II.

http://www.pt3.org/technologyineducation/

It’s okay at home…

Ignorance of the law

Poor me…

Work Time

Getting Started

So now it’s time to take a look at some of these scenarios. Our scenarios categorized into three areas: those dealing with privacy, with property, or with appropriate use.

Getting Started

To make it easier for even young kids to understand these issues, Doug calls them the three P’s., and has a simple definition to explain what they mean in terms of behavior.

Johnson’s

3 Ps of Technology EthicsPrivacy

Property

aPpropriate use

 Privacy

I will protect my privacy and respect the privacy of others.

 

 

Property

I will protect my property and respect the property of others.

 

 

A(P)propriate Use

I will use technology in constructive ways and in ways which do not break the rules of my family, church, school, or government. 

Guided Practice

Let’s take a look at one of these scenarios.

Paul is creating a videotape for his History Day project. As background music he is using Billy Joel’s song, “We Didn’t Start the Fire” that he has digitized from a CD he owns. The song works well for his exploration of the causes of global conflict. The projects will compete initially within his school and winners will advance to regional, public competitions.

Questions

What is the property?Who is its owner?What danger or discomfort might the

unethical action cause?Is there a parallel in the physical world

to this scenario?Can you think of other incidents that

would fall into this category?

Getting Started

As we look at and discuss these scenarios, keep in mind our focus question:How do we teach students ethical behavior as it relates to school and technology?

We’ll be coming back to this question later.

Work Time

We’re now going to break up into smaller groups and discuss some of these scenarios.

Let’s get into groups of four.Each group will be looking at a different

set of ethical scenarios.

Work Time

Open up the ethical scenarios handout and scroll to the page assigned to your group.

In your group, read over the three scenarios on that page and choose one to discuss (use whatever criteria you wish to choose).

Work Time

You will be presenting the issue and your discussion of it to the whole group in a little while.

So as you discuss the issue and go through the questions, jot down your responses and comments.

Work Time

You will also want to decide who in your group will be the presenter.

If you finish discussing your chosen scenario, feel free to look over the other two scenarios.

We’ll come back together in about ten minutes to share.

Share

Today we looked at some situations related to privacy, property and appropriate use. We had a chance to discuss the dangers or discomfort of the situation, and parallel situations, both in the real and virtual world.

Share

Before we discuss how we can teach our students how to avoid or negotiate these situations, let’s share one or two of the scenarios with the whole group.

Share

Before we broke into groups, I asked you to keep in mind our focus question

“How do we teach students ethical behavior as it relates to school and technology?”

Share

We’re now going to take a few minutes to brainstorm some ideas on how we can teach our students ethical behavior

Share

What can we do as Individual educators? A school? Parents?

How Do We Promote Ethical Behavior?

What can we do to promote ethical behavior?

Individual teachers Schools parents

New York City Curriculum Resources New York City School Library System Information Fluency

Continuum Standard 3: Demonstrating Social Responsibility

An independent learner contributes to the learning community by seeking multiple perspectives, sharing his or her understanding with others, and using information and resources ethically.

Standards

Technology StandardsISTE National Educational Technology Standard (NETS) Standard 2: Social, ethical, and human issues

Students understand the ethical, cultural, and societal issues related to technology.

Students practice responsible use of technology systems, information, and software.

Students develop positive attitudes toward technology uses that support lifelong learning, collaboration, personal pursuits, and productivity.

Standards

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