Must you publish your school e-mail address, a link to the school's homepage, or
the district acceptable use policy (AUP)?
If it falls in line with the school or
district Acceptable Use Policy, encourage the use of personal devices and even provide charging stations.
Not exact matches
Approval guidelines, however, for «freedom of speech» park
uses are not written into the new
policy, according to officials who said the park
district didn't want to define what is
acceptable.
Be ready to decode your school's or
district's
Acceptable Use Policies (AUPs) or Responsible
Use Policies (RUPs).
An
acceptable use policy is a document that is present in every school
district around the country.
Does your school or
district have an
Acceptable Use Policy (AUP) or other guidelines for online behavior?
These nascent rules — from
acceptable -
use policies created by school
districts to guide students on the Internet to basic manners instructions for students with school email accounts — have begun to show up in official documents.
As Nancy Willard, Internet safety expert and writer of
acceptable use policies for her school
district, observed, «Be sure to include due process information in your
policy.
Post school information — including curriculum standards, homework assignments, exemplary student work,
Acceptable Use Policies, frequently asked questions, and so on — on a multilingual
district Web site.
Bringing
Acceptable -
Use Policies Into the 21st Century EducationWorld is pleased to present this article by Kari Rhame Murphy, chief technology officer for a suburban Texas school
district.
Instead,
districts act within the
policy system, vying with state actors at all stages of
policy making to ensure that
policy actions will be
acceptable.291 And, after state
policies have been enacted, they must still be implemented; in matters of implementation, too, local
districts and state agencies
use personal contacts to negotiate how both parties can best respond.292 Thus, even though states have legitimate authority, it is exercised through informal and formal networks that help to shape local responses to state
policy.
While it is a worthwhile goal to train preservice teachers as «savvy consumers of technology,» teachers are rarely in positions of authority to make purchasing decisions and are often limited by
acceptable use policies set at the
district level, including filters and insufficient technology support and maintenance or access to computer labs.
Developed as part of the association ‟ s Participatory Learning in Schools: Leadership &
Policy initiative, the guide helps
districts rethink their
acceptable use policies.
Washington, DC (April 4, 2013)-- The Consortium for School Networking (CoSN) has issued a refreshed
acceptable use policy (AUP) guide, titled «Rethinking Acceptable Use Policies to Enable Digital Learning: A Guide for School Distric
acceptable use policy (AUP) guide, titled «Rethinking Acceptable Use Policies to Enable Digital Learning: A Guide for School Districts.&raq
use policy (AUP) guide, titled «Rethinking
Acceptable Use Policies to Enable Digital Learning: A Guide for School Distric
Acceptable Use Policies to Enable Digital Learning: A Guide for School Districts.&raq
Use Policies to Enable Digital Learning: A Guide for School
Districts.»
This
Acceptable Use Policy addresses the proper use of Technology in all locations within the Syracuse City School Distri
Use Policy addresses the proper
use of Technology in all locations within the Syracuse City School Distri
use of Technology in all locations within the Syracuse City School
District.
In addition to the prohibited activities detailed in Sections I (B) and II (B) of this
policy, the following types of activities are not
Acceptable School Activities:
Using Syracuse City School
District's computers, networks or Internet services for illegal purposes, in violation of Syracuse City School
District's
policies or in violation of city, state or federal laws.
Using Bibliographic tools on the World Wide Web All staff and students must be aware of the
District's
acceptable use policy and must be able to apply the
policy to their own
use of
District equipment and Internet computer services including World Wide Web services.
Statement of Principle (for this
Acceptable Use Policy Document) The Syracuse City School
District makes computer and internet services available to students, staff and community users in support of the educational objectives of the d
District makes computer and internet services available to students, staff and community users in support of the educational objectives of the
districtdistrict.
SCSD
Acceptable Use Policy We encourage students and staff to use the computers and technology available in the Syracuse City School Distri
Use Policy We encourage students and staff to
use the computers and technology available in the Syracuse City School Distri
use the computers and technology available in the Syracuse City School
District.
District Policy IIBG - Internet and Electronic Communication
Acceptable Use and Safety
Policy (coming)