A tough day today. The internet was down all day and the SBR reporting system could not be accessed for more than an hour or two at the height of report season. It is frustrating that staff (and students) are blocked from using many of the Web 2.0 sites I take for granted at home but yet another outage after the email debacle in the first few weeks of term is just depressing.

Following Mark Pesce on Twitter since listening to his keynote a week ago and I note, after another keynote to educators today has written:   

Mark Pesce mpesce Filtering and blocking is an abrogation of responsibility on the “wisdom of use” – and schools must impart that wisdom!
 
Mark Pesce mpesce The kids working at home do things completely differently from what is happening in the classroom – almost scary they’re so far ahead.
 
Mark Pesce  mpesce Schools talk about Web2.0, but haven’t come to grips with the whole social network thing. How to engage that in learning evnironment?   

Teaching students to use the net appropriately and taking Gilmore’s Law seriously – that the internet routes around censorship – would make more sense.

Gilmore's Law

Watch Pesce’s ‘Gilmore’s Law’ talk to Telstra on my vodpod list (right).

Already it is simple for students to send an attachment with an inappropriate image to or from their DET email into any school but the notion we filter out the what makes the net so useful is just foolish. We don’t ban knives from restaurants because some maniac might plunge your knife threw your heart. If someone breaks the rules society has laws that can be enacted. Look at how amazingly well Wikipedia works with the regulations in place.

The other comment – the ‘scary’ one – is perhaps the heart of our issue. The kids are asked to ‘power down’ to come to school and it is just not the real world. Even if we had all the infrastructure in place across the state in our school system, we do not have enough teachers trained – or understanding the paradigm shift – to staff it…yet!

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  1. […] student just accesses what they want in the playground via their mobile phone? Quite simply, it is Gilmore’s Law in action in our […]

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