Wednesday 14 November 2007

Social networking from a teens' perspective

A teenager
Are teens as wet behind the ears as we seem to think? Are we perhaps being so cautious in our approach to protecting kids online that we are losing out on some of the educational benefits of social networking? In this article, we look at what teenagers themselves think about social networking and e-safety.

This is the text (more or less) of a talk I gave recently at a Naace social network conference.


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Practical ICT eJournal: November issue out now!


Planning meetingThis half-term's issue contains a great line-up of useful articles:

UK Funding
If you're based in the UK, here are details of the recent announcements
about funding for the next 3 years.

Curriculum changes
Again, for UK-based colleagues. What are the recent changes in the curriculum, including the new Diplomas? This article summarises the information and tells where to find out more.

Integrated learning systems
This report draws on an article which appeared recently in a Texas-based
newsletter. It contains the 4 key things you need to know to implement an ILS successfully.

An e-safety issue
One of the findings from a recent survey I administered into teenagers'
social networking habits causes concern. This is a must-read for anyone
concerned with e-safety issues.

Guest article: Implementing Moodle
Roger Davies describes the setting up of a Moodle-based VLE in his school. If you're thinking of doing something similar, this is essential reading because Roger takes us through all the main considerations and warns us of the pitfalls involved.

Wikis and shared documents: copyright and related issues
A warning: that confidential information that you have so confidently been sharing online may not be so confidential after all.

Using shared documents in a school context
When are online collaborative tools useful in a school context? Read on to find out.

Nice not doing business with you: walking the walk and word-of-mouth
marketing
Basically, how not to do it, with some challenges for you and your team.

Embedding the use of educational technology
If part of your role is to get others to use educational technology in
their teaching, you need to read this article. A lesson from the
discipline of economics.

This article is available only to subscribers to Leading and Managing Educational Technology. Click the link to find out more about this low-cost subscription.

What's been, and what's coming: an update about articles on this website

I always make it a point to take my "podcasting kit" along whenever I am giving a presentation or, indeed, attending any conference. Unfortunately, I don't always have time to check the recording, because I take it for granted that it will all work fine.

Thus it was that I discovered, too late, that something has gone wrong with my digital recorder. My investigations have revealed that there is something wrong with the external microphone connection. I will, needless to say, get it fixed. But it does mean that the opportunity for posting 3 podcasts of my most recent presentations has come and gone, because I'm not sure if the quality is good enough.

So, what have you missed? Well, nothing in a sense, because I will post my talks as articles. Read on to find out what they were all about.