Posted by sunnywilliams on 31st March 2007
Yesterday was Stop Cyberbullying Day. I encourage each student to really think about how they treat each other in cyberspace. You may think that words written on your computer won’t hurt someone, but they really do.
Here are some hints.
- When you are angry or hurt, don’t write an email, send an IM, post to MySpace, etc. Step away from your computer and give yourself some time before responding to something.
- Write as if the person you are talking about, their parents, or your parents are sitting beside you reading what you are writing. If you don’t think any of these people would like what you are writing, don’t.
- Remember, you can’t take back words that you have written.
- Don’t write something that you might be sorry for writing in the future.
- Respect! Always be respectful of others. This doesn’t mean that you have to like everyone, but you should always be respectful of others.
We live in a time of great access to tools (Internet, blogs, MySpace, etc) that expand our world beyond Trussville. There is a great deal of positive information and opportunities because of these tools, but we all must learn how to use them appropriately and for good.
Posted in blogs, classrooms, cyberbullying, digital natives, growing up, safety, technology | 7 Comments »
Posted by sunnywilliams on 6th February 2007
One of our 7th grade math classes had a discussion today about technology and student’s ability to think. The teacher asked students if technology was causing people not to have to think. A student replied, “Do you have to think to use technology?” What are your thoughts? How is technology changing the way we process information, make decisions, and think?
Posted in change, digital natives, technology | 18 Comments »
Posted by sunnywilliams on 2nd February 2007
I read another principal’s blog this morning about some of the ways technology has changed life for non-digital natives. I would love to hear some of the ways technology has changed in your life time. How has it changed? How do you learn new technology? What do you think is coming?
Here are some of mine–The television in our home when I was a child did not have a remote control–except for me, as the youngest child, I was the one nominated to get up and change the channel. I was in elementary school when desk top computers first entered classrooms. The monitor was not colored or even black and white. All text was bright green on a green screen. Floppy disks were about 5 inches squared and really were floppy. My parents got our first computer in 1983–an Apple IIE. It did not have a printer and had 128K of memory. It cost $2,300. My first mobile phone was a bag phone that only worked in my car. My parents gave it to me so that I could contact help if something happened when I was driving back and forth to college. I had to type my high school papers on a word processor–a step beyone a typewriter but not a full-fledged computer either.
I can’t wait to read what you can come up with…Dr. Williams
Posted in Web 2.0, change, digital natives, growing up, technology | 81 Comments »