WWW-Talk,
 
A contemporary topic includes social media and public schools, as part of 
curriculum models, studying-related or homework-related activities, or in the 
context of recreational Web use during school.
 
Some web articles support social networking websites for students in public 
schools: http://www.edweek.org/dd/articles/2010/06/16/03networking.h03.html , 
http://www.eschoolnews.com/2010/05/20/teaching-in-a-socially-networked-classroom/
 .  There is also at least one survey of K-12 educators about social networking 
and content-sharing tools: http://www.edweb.net/fimages/op/K12Survey.pdf.

Marketing can explain a prevalence of articles encouraging the use of Web-based 
social media applications in schools, compared to other opinions.  Some article 
authors are also authors of books about social media and public schools.  
Companies so marketing could be doing so because they want to advertise to 
young Americans, to advertise to them specific brands of clothes, specific 
music albums or entertainment.
 
Some social media websites have made use of Sponsored Stories, the topic of a 
class action lawsuit, Fraley v. Facebook 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fraley_v._Facebook,_Inc).  "As Facebook builds 
its ads business and gives advertisers more ways to reach different audiences, 
a new lexicon has emerged. The social network has invented terms like Sponsored 
Stories, Page Post Ads and Promoted Posts, but it doesn’t always explain them 
or maintain consistent usage over time, especially since the same ads serve 
different levels of advertisers, who purchase them through varying channels" 
(http://www.insidefacebook.com/2013/01/11/understanding-the-difference-between-facebook-sponsored-stories-page-post-ads-promoted-posts-and-marketplace-ads/).
 
A solution for public schools to get all of the features of technology-enhanced 
socialization software without any of their concerns includes that public 
schools can purchase and make use of application servers for intranets and the 
Internet.  Educators could then configure and make available software 
applications for their students on those public school servers interoperably 
with digital textbook tablet computers.

Each school district could install and configure specific software applications 
onto their servers for classroom use by educators.  Students could access such 
applications from inside schoolbuildings utilizing intranets and from outside 
of schoolbuildings utilizing wide area networks or the Internet.  Each school 
can host their own Web applications, for example as per: 
http://www.schooname.schooldistrict.state.edu or 
http://www.schoolname.schooldistrict.state.us .

Rationale for school districts purchasing servers, equipment, and computer 
software includes encouraging capitalist processes, competitions to 
manufacture, sell and steward versioning products tailored to educational 
settings to enhance educational results and outcomes.
 
The combination of adequate school district equipment funds and teacher 
involvement in the purchase of or activation of computer software from options 
available to them, utilizing their classroom observations and tacit knowledge 
of what is working, can result in tasked development, rapid versioning, and the 
utilization of emerging data and metrics, reports, and other topics from 
education science and other multidisciplinary research.  Such processes can 
expedite advancements in educational technology and software, including 
software simultaneously providing technology-enhanced socialization and 
scholastic features.


 
Kind regards,

Adam Sobieski                                     

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