For this
week’s activity – exploring an ethical dilemma, I plan to use Rolfe et al.’s
(2001) reflective model to
reflect on a situation that occurred a year or so ago at our school and to make
some decisions in order to be prepared for similar situations, in the future.
What?
Last year, my relieving
teacher had set up buddy sessions between our class and the class she teaches in
at the other local school. During one of these sessions, the children were able
to share any work they wished to with their buddy. One student (Student A) shared his google
document with his buddy (Student B) from the other school, giving him editing
rights.
Later that afternoon,
I received an email from google to inform me that Student B had edited the document, giving his full name.
This had occurred after the class had returned to their school.
As the name on the
google email was unfamiliar to me, I opened the document to discover a swear
word written across the work of Student A. I took screenshots, checked the revision
history to establish when this had happened and then deleted the comments, before
Student A could read them.
So what?
Most of my actions
were based on a duty of care for the student of my classroom, for my colleagues
at another school and on my professional responsibility in the area of digital citizenship
and device use.
Our school has a clear
code of conduct in which we need to act.
“The board supports
the right of the school to check communication technology related work or data
of staff or students at any time, and to carry out a comprehensive
investigation of any breaches of the school’s cyber safety procedures. Such
breaches will be taken seriously.” (2017)
It was important that
I let the other school, teachers and principal know what had occurred and shared
the evidence I had with them. I also informed our own principal. This all became
important as Student B refused to acknowledge that he had done anything that violated
device use.
It is important in
these situations that staff are empowered with the ability of how to gather
more information on breaches of our code of conduct. They need to, as part of their
professional ethics be able to base their actions on a duty of care for
students, colleagues and themselves.
Now what?
After reflecting on
this issue and using Rolfe et al.’s model, I think that as a leader of our school and the teacher in charge
of digital technology, I need to inform and guide my teachers on what to do in
regards to breaches in cyber safety and digital citizenship. These need to be
clearly unpacked and talked through with teachers so that they can do so with
students, and some clear guidelines in particular situations needs to be established
to go alongside our code of conduct.
With students, as part
of our initial classroom expectations, we need to unpack a range of situations and establish what expectations
would be of a number of scenarios.
I also know we need to
be clear about the reasons why we share documents with others, and even if our
students are not being taught how to do this for collaborative purposes,
teachers need to be aware that they will be doing it anyway.
Ehrich, L. C. , Kimber
M., Millwater, J. & Cranston, N. (2011). Ethical dilemmas: a model to
understand teacher practice, Teachers and Teaching: theory and practice, 17:2,
173-185, DOI: 10.1080/13540602.2011.539794
Goldfields Board of Trustees
(2017) Code of Conduct Cybersafety . Internal school document
University of Cumbria, A. Liason, (2016) Rolfe et al.’s
(2001) reflective model - https://my.cumbria.ac.uk/media/MyCumbria/Documents/ReflectiveModelRolfe.pdf
Hi Jac,
ReplyDeleteI completely agree with you about gathering evidence (taking screenshots) before your student can see and be offended by the inappropriate comments. Informing everyone can be difficult and maintaining relationships is very important. Well done Jac on a difficult situation.
I really like the model that was given for this task as it really helps you look at all the people involved and affected by the incident and then all the possible solutions to work through and the consequences of them. There are strong systems set up in our schools thank goodness to use and it seemed to me you used those really well. It is important to ensure everyone is aware and then to discuss strategies for what you might do in the future if it happens again. Preparing for the worse case scenario often ensure we never actually get there. I wonder if you also needed to include the parents in the 'now what' part so they know what cyber safety expectations look like at school for their children and perhaps help support that by having those conversations and systems at home?
ReplyDeleteA great response on your part. What a fantastic learning opportunity to set up a buddy system between schools in the region, a great use of digital tools to enhance collaboration and teach about globalisation on a small, local scale helping to ensure the safety of all involved.
ReplyDeleteIt is fantastic that you had the email to alert you to a situation that could have ended very differently if you hadn't seen the inappropriate comments and remarks before Student A. Were you using the chrome draftback add on (http://draftback.com/), or did you just use the revision history on google docs for the investigative purposes?
Well done gathering the evidence and ensuring your student's safety at the same time.