We are starting to block MySpace not because we want to censor free speech
but that MySpace.com's webpages are so large that it takes up all the
school's bandwidth.  We have traced at least 20 - 30% of our bandwidth to
MySpace.com downloads.  As we cannot afford more bandwidth, we have no
choice but to block.

God bless,
Sam Young
CIO La Sierra University

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Ana Maria
Moraes
Sent: Tuesday, April 18, 2006 1:07 PM
To: The Digital Divide Network discussion group
Subject: Re: [DDN] The Word that Will Get Your Blog Censored by Texas
SchoolsDistricts

Hi Andy, 
   
  When those schools administrators block the blogs of their students (my
space) I also think of what kind of message we are giving to the childrens
about the use of technology. Here, in Brazil we also have some messages from
school administrators with a lot of roles of "Dont do this or don´t do that
in the computer labs" that seems that even get the chance to think about the
use of blogs and technology in general  in a more properly, critical and
positive way.  
   
  For example, there were some strange deaths among teenagers in the city of
Sao Paulo related to their personal blogs that were noticed in the
newspapers. Because of that, the director of the school that I worked in Sao
Paulo decided that we should not teach the students how to use  blogs in
school because of child safety. I did not agree with that position of  my
boss and decided to teach my students how to use this tool. He respected my
position and I had a wonderful experience with my students personal blogs.
It was also a wonderful way to get more in touch with their lives and themes
that they were concernet about. I used to give them some ethical issues
related to blogs and  had no problem with my students. I think it is
important to be concerned about this issues of child safety, but also give
them the digital opportunity to use those tools (blogs) in an ethical and
responsible way. I also had an experience of exchange with a class in a
school from New Jersey and
 this group of children, but the experience was not successful. The reason
was not the language barrier but the fact that the majority of my students
did not wanted to comunicate with the american students because of the
position of the Bush administration in the Iraq war during that time. We
discussed this theme a lot in class and I also tried to show them that not
all americans agreed with the war and so on, but I had to respect their
critical view and political position about this theme.  

  Best regards, 
  Ana Maria Moraes. 
  [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  http://br.geocities.com/bibliotecamicromundos 
Andy Carvin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escreveu:
  Hi everyone,

I've just posted a blog entry in response to recent posts by Wesley 
Fryer and Miguel Guhlin regarding online censorship in schools. Some 
school districts in Texas and elsewhere have started blocking all Web 
content that uses the word [EMAIL PROTECTED] (replace the @ with an "a" and 
you'll know the word I mean - I don't want this message blocked by 
filters either.) This website has become a magnet of controversy as of 
late, and it's reached the point where mere mention of it is taboo. This 
filtering is preventing educational bloggers and teachers from 
discussing [EMAIL PROTECTED] in any context, whether it relates to child 
safety, 
media literacy or another topic. Miguel has even started to organize an 
online protest campaign.

A bit from my blog:

As Miguel notes on his blog, important educational blogs like Wesley's 
site and the techLEARNING blog are getting censored arbitrarily because 
they are trying to raise awareness about sites like [EMAIL PROTECTED], 
encouraging 
critical examinations by educators and a greater emphasis on media 
literacy. To engage in a constructive debate about sites like this, you 
have to mention them. And preferably link to them. And these acts are 
getting bloggers banned by schools.

While I strongly am against any form of censorship, I am thoroughly 
disgusted by school districts that allow their filters to prevent 
educators from engaging in professional discourse. I have lost track of 
the number of times that I've posted a message to my WWWEDU discussion 
list and received a bunch of autoreplies from school districts saying 
that teachers there won't be reading my post because they contain 
"inappropriate content." Usually, these posts have to do with cases of 
school filtering censorship, controversial sites like [EMAIL PROTECTED] or 
other 
media literacy-related challenges faced by the modern educator. The 
filtering software used to supposedly protect children is preventing 
educators from taking an active role in understanding and discussing the 
complexities of Internet use in the classroom. Schools may claim "in 
loco parentis" when describing filters used to protect children. But 
what are they trying to protect teachers from? Being better users of 
technology? Being responsible, informed educators?

...The whole thing reminds me of Those We Don't Speak Of, the mysterious 
creatures in M. Night Shyamalan's film, The Village. The parents of the 
village were so paranoid about their children coming to harm's way that 
they wouldn't even say the name of the creatures that were supposedly 
lurking in the local forest. We seem to have reached that point in 
education - where politicians and administrators are so paranoid that 
educators can't even speak the names of things that may lurk in the 
virtual forest, lest their students be corrupted by mere mention of them....

The Internet is indeed our civic space - my space, your space. *Our 
space.* How can educators educate our children to use the Internet as 
responsible 21st century citizens when we can't even speak about the 
things that might affect them?

Read the full blog entry:
http://www.andycarvin.com

Permalink:
http://www.andycarvin.com/archives/2006/04/the_mword_that_will.html

digg link:
http://digg.com/technology/The_Word_that_Will_Get_Your_Blog_Censored_by_Texa
s_Schools_Districts


thanks,
ac
-- 
------------------------------
Andy Carvin
acarvin (at) edc . org
andycarvin (at) yahoo . com

http://www.digitaldivide.net
http://www.andycarvin.com
------------------------------
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