This is a very important point. The ongoing frustration of trying to teach when students don't have signed AUPs has led me to lobby for an opt out type system as I don't see moving from an AUP in our district. Often the parents and/or the kid have just forgotten the paper work not that there is a legitimate reason for restricting a student.
This link has been bookmarked by 29 people . It was first bookmarked on 30 Apr 2009, by Will Richardson.
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Donna DesRochesSo, as long as we viewed the Internet as extra-curricular, the idea of an contract-based AUP worked just fine. But, we are now starting to move past the era when the Internet was extra-curricular into the era when the Internet is the curriculum.
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paul reidSo, as long as we viewed the Internet as extra-curricular, the idea of an contract-based AUP worked just fine. But, we are now starting to move past the era when the Internet was extra-curricular into the era when the Internet is the curriculum. Much of what teachers are teaching these days has Internet based components and even Internet based activities. When we view the Internet as a standard part of the curriculum, the AUP doesn't make sense as a contractual endeavor because the school cannot contract for the delivery of curriculum.
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02 May 09
Sheryl A. McCoyImplement the curriculum including the Internet, whether or not the AUP has been signed.
policy aup schools education school_board students parents community
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Implement the curriculum including the Internet, whether or not the AUP has been signed.
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Elizabeth BagishAcceptable Use Policies developed as a result of legislation that attempted to govern how schools allowed students to use the Internet. While legislation usually did not directly call for their formation, it was sort of the implementation of choice for most schools around the country. The policy is basically a signed agreement documenting what's acceptable in using the Internet at school (although as Karl Fisch stated, it is really an unacceptable use policy as most of them are just a list of things that kids cannot do). Parents and students had to sign the AUP before they were granted any Internet privileges at school. In that way, it was sort of like a contract between the school and the student's family.
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01 May 09
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what happens when the Internet IS the textbook?
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30 Apr 09
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Jeff JohnsonAcceptable Use Policies developed as a result of legislation that attempted to govern how schools allowed students to use the Internet. While legislation usually did not directly call for their formation, it was sort of the implementation of choice for most schools around the country. The policy is basically a signed agreement documenting what's acceptable in using the Internet at school (although as Karl Fisch stated, it is really an unacceptable use policy as most of them are just a list of things that kids cannot do). Parents and students had to sign the AUP before they were granted any Internet privileges at school. In that way, it was sort of like a contract between the school and the student's family.
policy aup Acceptable Use Policies outdated responsible Internet privileges school
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One of the questions concerned Acceptable Use Policies and the ramifications of parents failing or unwilling to sign them, so I wanted to sort of rehash my answer here.
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Add Sticky NoteSo, as long as we viewed the Internet as extra-curricular, the idea of an contract-based AUP worked just fine
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So, as long as we viewed the Internet as extra-curricular, the idea of an contract-based AUP worked just fine
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Add Sticky NoteWhat I am saying is the principles in those AUP's need to be moved into the school's discipline code and schools need to retroactively punish students for violations just as we do for any other disciplinary violations
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I think we need to look at consequences - problem is usually we restrict access - is this the best recourse?
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Will RichardsonWhat I am saying is the principles in those AUP's need to be moved into the school's discipline code and schools need to retroactively punish students for violations just as we do for any other disciplinary violations. The proactive contract-based idea on
Public Stiky Notes
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