Friday, February 7, 2014

Social Networking: Learning opportunity or security concern

Social Networking

The tide of proprietary information is changing and social networking is right at the heart of this change.  The current genealogy trend has been to share information with each other to get a bigger picture on who your ancestors are.  Social networking fosters communication, engagement, and collaboration.  Genealogists consult with each other to combine information so that information can be gleaned at a greater pace.  They communicate, and collaborate with each other about their ancestors that makes learning personal and fun. I am excited what technology brings to use, but I am also concerned about safety and privacy.  Facebook is currently collaborating with ancestry.com to take a persons’ ancestral file information and combine it with current family Facebook members.  Consider for a moment the ramifications of all this information in one company’s hands.  Are you concerned what Facebook might do with that kind of information?  Exactly, I am too! 

The benefits of social networking is endless with a constant trade of benefits and liabilities.  Verbal skills and face-to-face communications are sacrificed in lieu of written skills that are emphasized as we communicate, collaborate, and engage with each other.  Technical skills are gained or improved with sites like Flickr or Googledocs, or ipiccy.com where students can publish documents, images, or videos online.  Research skills are increased with the mass amount of information available on the internet.  Now we can connect with friends and family across the street, or all over the world.

With every blessing also comes great responsibility.  We must make smart and wise choices about the information we choose to share and recognized internet privacy and security is a real issue to be addressed.  Many people give out information of their personal lives without considering the consequences.  What many of us do not recognize is what we write is a reflection of who we are, what we value and choose to prioritize in our lives.  Who are you?  Its simple to tell, just take a look at your Facebook account.  Your language, your faith, even your concerns gives a snapshot on what you value.  We decide what is important to us, and the same is true with online learning.  Resources are constantly traded by what we value most.   

We must be an example, especially to our students, we need to ensure their safety, and ensure there is not threat to issues such as identity theft, security, privacy.  We need to maintain sites, establish ground rules, and declare to students’ our internet concerns and expectations (Richardson, 2010). Most of all, we need to emulate proper online etiquette behavior, thus becoming the model for students to follow. The net provides many opportunities and learning possibilities are endless.  Our challenge is to provide structured guidance for students to follow to make the most of their internet learning experience. 

References:


Richardson, W. (2010). Blogs, wikis, podcasts, and other powerful web tools for classrooms. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin. 




1 comment:

  1. Great blog, you hit upon some very good points when it comes to internet security. It is the first I have heard about ancestor.com and facebook collaborating. At first I thought, what a great idea! Staying connected with family is the primary reason I am on facebook. What a great venue to share genealogy. However, your point on the security of that information, with one company is a little scary.
    There is a saying that the internet is a little like the wild west, that it is a haven for all sorts of illegalities, and not ruled by the government. Dangerous territory, the description fits.
    However, bringing that dangerous realm into the classroom is a must to prepare the students for the 21st century workplace. There are security companies who set up platforms within a school district to protect the information within the classroom, and as well as outside the classroom when BYOD and Cloud computing have been put into place. But that comes at a price.
    I agree with you about social networking and communication. I have seen many times, a child with their family playing video games on their phones, instead of socially interacting with their family. How does this stunt a child's communication skills? If you are preparing a student for the 21st century workplace, it can speak to that it may be probable that most communication would occur via the internet, conference calling, video conferencing etc. But not all 21 century work places will follow that model. There is still the medical field which I hope will continue with face-to-face appointments.
    Also, digital citizenship. I cannot say enough how important this is taught within the K-12 classroom. With technology being used within the classroom, it also brings more responsibility to the Teacher and the school to educate students what is right and wrong pertaining to the social network. How to avoid cyber bullying, and how to deal with it when it happens to the student.
    Your blog hit on a lot of very good points, thank you, it gave me a lot to relate and respond to.

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