Chapter 5 Challenges 6 and 7
The challenges in this chapter really got me thinking.
First, I had a lot or trouble creating, finding, understanding, and completing
Challenge #6 (creating a classroom monitoring profile). I would like to thank
everyone who was so patient with all my questions about that one. Challenge #7,
discussing social media use with a student, really got me thinking. Below are
my reflections on the challenges.
Challenge #6 Creating a Classroom
Monitoring Portal
After
hours spent searching on the internet, tears, and probably some pretty stupid
questions, I finally understand what a CMP is and can do for me. I am not
hosting or participating in a project right now. I ended up creating a CMP page
for my Flattening Classrooms experience. I have included a link to the
University of North Alabama, my Blog, and my PLN. I have also added a Twitter
feed for Flattening Classrooms, To Do list, and a news search widget. A CMP
lets you keep tabs on everything that is happening with one glance. I can see how
this is a very powerful tool for managing a group of project participants. It
puts all the information in one spot. I have really learned a lot during this
challenge. Below is a link to my public Netvibes CMP.
http://www.netvibes.com/stephblackburn#General
Challenge #7 Empower Digital
Citizenship Action
For
this challenge, I interviewed a fourth grade student who has a Facebook page.
As a parent, teacher, and a private person by nature, I find social media a
little daunting. After speaking with this student I realized just how important
it is to teach children how to conduct themselves online. First a little
background. The student I interviewed is ten years old and has had her own
Facebook account for about one year. She
told me that her Mom only allows her to “be on” Facebook using the family
computer located in the living room and can only accept friend requests from people
she has met in person. Below are the questions I asked her and her paraphrased
responses.
How did you get a Facebook
account if the minimum age to join Facebook is 13?
She
stated that her Mom set up her page and she didn’t know that you had to be
thirteen to have a Facebook account. (This sounds like a question I needed to
ask her Mom.)
Why did you want a Facebook
account?
She
stated that some of her friends, Mom, older sister, and other relatives had
accounts and wanted to participate.
What do you do when you are
on Facebook?
I
look at the information my friends share on Facebook, chat with my friends, and
keep up with what is happening in their lives. I also share photos and stories
about my life.
Do you ever do anything on
Facebook for school?
No.
Has anyone made fun of you,
bullied you, or made you sad by the comments they made on Facebook?
Her
answer was yes. She explained that a cousin of hers made fun of a picture she
posted of herself. She stated that she thought she looked really nice in the
picture and the cousin did not agree.
I then asked her how she
handled that situation.
She
said that it made her really mad and she told her Mom about. They discussed the
comments and decided that the best course of action was to ignore the comments.
Have you ever made any
comments that hurt someone’s feelings?
She
said she didn’t think she ever had but if she did she didn’t intentionally set
out to hurt someone’s feelings.
What do you like best about
Facebook?
She
said she liked talking with her friends and sharing pictures.
My Thoughts
As a parent of a young girl, I don’t think most young children are
mature enough or understand the pitfalls of Facebook. Facebook has that age
requirement for a reason. That being said, I thought this young lady seemed to
be conducting herself as a good digital citizen. From the information she gave
me, she seemed to be trying her best to be cordial. She was only communicating
with people she had relationships with outside of Facebook. Therefore, she
wasn’t unknowingly committing many cultural taboos or having many language
disconnects. She did however experience some emotional pain from some mean
comments made by a relative. Overall, I thought this girl was being a good
digital citizen. I just wish she didn’t have to cut her social media teeth
using a site that is so public.
I think that your interview was great! I love that asked questions that targeted cyberbullying and that she was open with you. I hope you don't mind if I alter your questions a tad to use with two of my former students!
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