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Blissfully Unaware Presentation

Blissfully Unaware presentation, revised April 2009 by Michelle K. Baldwin.

Session Topic:

Adults call it “Social Networking.” Kids say “it’s what we do.” Feel left behind in the world of blogging, online profiles, and photo-sharing sites? Are the negative stories on the news your only source of information? This session will provide you an orientation to social networking tools, as well as how to use their existence as an educational advantage.

Blogs

  • Short for “Web Log”
  • Online journal
  • Instant publication
  • Instant feedback
  • Communities
  • Authentic experiences
  • FREE
  • Popular blog sites: www.blogger.com, www.typepad.com, wordpress.com.
  • Twitter is a micro-blog — Participants get 140 characters to tell the “Twitterverse” what they’re doing right now. YOU can follow others using Twitter (“following”)– and others using Twitter can follow YOU (“followers”). Follow Michelle on Twitter at www.twitter.com/michellek107

Photo Sharing

  • Instant sharing with Friends, Family
  • Public accounts- sharing
  • Flickr, Shutterfly, Dropshots- examples
  • Various levels of membershipsFree or Monthly/Yearly subscriptions (more storage, additional features)
  • Sharing options- copyright alternatives (Flickr’s Creative Commons)

Online Profile Sites

  • MySpace and Facebook- most popular
  • LinkedIn – a social network for business professionals/recruiting
  • Provide a “one stop site” for a personal profile, blogs, photo/video sharing, commenting, quick links
  • People with shared interests find a micro-community: Instantly connected to people all over the world, and Networking is facilitated more quickly and easily than ever before. Can join “Groups”  with common interests.
  • Quick and easy publishing: No programming or coding knowledge required–Up and running within minutes
  • FREE

Social Networks- kids can be more socially aware through groups, causes, relief efforts, charities

How is K-12 Education addressing social networking issues?

  • Where will kids learn responsible, ethical, social networking?
  • How will they learn what they post, produce, publish will be cached somewhere forever? (WayBackMachine at archive.org)
  • Colleges, Universities, and Employers are performing web searches for prospective employees.

Privacy Settings

Most Online Profile sites can be set to PRIVATE– public users must “subscribe” or receive permission from site owner to view. Look for “Settings” on social networks and locate the Privacy pages.

Problems with Online Profiles

  • Unsupervised- kids may reveal too much.
  • No background checks- if you know a person’s email address (or create an imposter email), you can create an online profile site about someone else… without his/her knowledge or permission.
  • Without the proper balance, it’s easy to stay “plugged in” all the time.

Help for Parents or Educators Most online profile sites have a Help section on their main page where parents and educators can find Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs).

See also Tips for Internet Safety.

Funny Social Networking Video

1 Comment

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    By: Jason Everett on April 24, 2009 at 1:00 pm      Reply

    This is a great resource! Thanks for sharing Michelle. Some of my favorites are: Twitter for my PLN and Picasa for photo sharing.

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