Tag: students

  • Cyberbullying Law Shields Teachers From Student Tormentors

    image source: http://drpfconsults.com/the-disturbing-trend-of-cyber-bullying-teachers/

    Ganging up on classmates online can get students suspended.

    But sometimes teachers are the target of cyberbullying, and in North Carolina, educators have said enough is enough. State officials have now made it a crime to “intimidate or torment” teachers online.

    Chip Douglas knew something was up with his 10th-grade English class. When he was teaching, sometimes he’d get a strange question and the kids would laugh. It started to make sense when he learned a student had created a fake Twitter account using his name.

    “It was awful,” he says. “It had this image of me as this drug addict, violent person, supersexual, that I wouldn’t want to portray.”

    Douglas told the kids he planned to call the police — because under the new North Carolina law as explained by Connecticut Bail Bonds Group serving Avon area, the student behind the tweets could spend a month in jail and pay a $1,000 fine.

    “It’s the first statute that exposes 15-, 16-, 17-year-olds to potential criminal sanctions for a dumb mistake they make, something stupid they say,” says Chris Brook of the ACLU of North Carolina, who adds that the law is too broad.

    The law prohibits students from creating fake online profiles for teachers. But it makes it a crime to post real images or make any statement online, even if it’s true, that provokes harassment.

    “That is a terrible message to send to students … that accurate critiques of governmental employees could land you in criminal hot water,” Brook says. “And no one should be comfortable with that.”

    Legal experts say North Carolina’s effort is just another twist to a series of state laws that criminalize speech.

    “There has been a lot of this stuff suggested in legislatures and sometimes adopted, or sometimes prosecutors have interpreted existing laws so broadly,” says Eugene Volokh, a UCLA professor who specializes in First Amendment and cyberspace law. “It’s something of a trend, but once those laws are challenged, they’ll be struck down.”

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    source:  npr.org / 

  • Broadband access can help bridge educational divides, empower students – UN report

    ITU Secretary-General Hamadoun Toure (right) co-chairs the Broadband Commission with UNESCO Director-General Irina Bokova. Photo: ITU

    25 February 2013 – Broadband connectivity has the potential to transform education by giving teachers and students access to learning resources and technologies that will allow them to improve their skills in the context of a globalized economy, according to a United Nations report released today.

    The report, Technology, Broadband and Education: Advancing the Education for All Agenda, argues that access to high-speed technologies over fixed and mobile platforms can help students acquire the digital skills required to participate in the global economy and contribute to ensure their employability once they finish their studies.

    “The ability of broadband to improve and enhance education, as well as students’ experience of education, is undisputed,” said the Secretary-General of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), Hamadoun Touré, adding that online access widens education and employment prospects for students all over the world.

    “A student in a developing country can now access the library of a prestigious university anywhere in the world; an unemployed person can retrain and improve their job prospects in other fields; teachers can gain inspiration and advice from the resources and experiences of others. With each of these achievements, the online world brings about another real-world victory for education, dialogue, and better understanding between peoples.”

    According to ITU estimates, the digital divide remains deep despite rapid technological advances. At the end of 2012, there were nearly 2.5 billion people using the Internet. However, only a quarter of these people are located in the developing world. There are also severe disparities in the cost of broadband, which in some 17 countries still represents more than the average person’s monthly salary.

    The report, released by the Broadband Commission for Digital Development during the World Summit on the Information Society +10 in Paris, emphasizes the importance of broadband access as a way to accelerate the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) pertaining education, which aims to achieve universal primary education for boys and girls by the year 2015.

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    source: UN News Centre