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| [senit] youtube | |
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Sean O'Sullivan
sean.frankwise at easynet.co.uk
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| Article: [senit] youtube | |
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Hi again David, I suppose that if some staff are naive in using the internet and think that once they hit a site the content is safe then you're going to need more than just a basic internet use policy - sounds like there's a lot of early skills training needed there too! Totally agree that pre-viewing material is a sound approach, but an internet policy ought to also take account of the possibility that staff or pupils may come across some material which really isn't acceptable. The key expectation has to be that if you see something that you think is wrong, you should have a positive model for what to do about it. Tell staff, click away, turn off etc. The luxury that many of us in special schools have is that in most cases we're right there with the pupils anyway and can guide them through the 'right' response. Effectively we can teach children acceptable behaviour, whilst many pupils in less supervised situations may need schools to protect them with clearer taught techniques (just in case), or as a last resort a filtering approach which desperately tries to outwit the wider world. I definitely feel that banning sites like YouTube is as archaic a response to negative material as banning mobile phones and PS2s is, and that if those who operate these bans thought about what's available on DVD and in paper form then perhaps they'd rethink their approach to embrace media of any kind and focus on the 'negative content' rather than the 'media' itself. Best, Sean O'Sullivan sean.frankwise at easynet.co.uk Headteacher (acting) Frank Wise School, Banbury http://www.frankwise.oxon.sch.uk http://www.parkroadict.co.uk On 12 Dec 2007, at 12:39, david fettes wrote: > i guess it could be covered by a normal aup. what some > staff dont seem to realise is that there is a lot of > not v nice stuff on utube(even though it removes stuff > continuously), and that something that starts off ok > can get bad. so have reccomnded pre-viewing all > content before a class. however as youtube is one site > rather than the internet which most know is > unregulated, this seems to be harder to get over . > again on the internet a lot of bad stuff would be > stopped by our isp but i am not sure this is tru for > stuff within a site like youtube. some schools do ban > it so it obviously an area worth discussing and those > of you who know more about it than me can help here.as > david suggests making a direct link to pre-viewed > stuff might be a good idea. > david > --- Sean O'Sullivan <sean.frankwise at easynet.co.uk> > wrote: > >> Great to see interest in using stuff like YouTube. >> Is there anything >> in particular that you feel wouldn't be covered by >> an existing >> internet use policy? >> >> Sean O'Sullivan >> sean.frankwise at easynet.co.uk >> Headteacher (acting) >> Frank Wise School, Banbury >> http://www.frankwise.oxon.sch.uk >> >> http://www.parkroadict.co.uk >> >> >> On 11 Dec 2007, at 22:42, david fettes wrote: >> >>> has anyone got a policy youtube with respect to a >>> special school/s i could see please? obviously >> there >>> is useful stuff on it as indicated below for staff >>> use.Some things may be useful for teaching.Other >>> things are not. >>> David |
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