Best Practices for Meeting CIPA Requirements
Monday, July 16, 2007 at 03:55PM
Doug Johnson in Ed Tech article

Best Practices for Meeting CIPA Requirements
EdTech Magazine Q4 2005.


I was visiting a school district not long ago and had a chance to visit with its curriculum director. In passing, she referred to their technology director as the “Tech-Nazi” - a title she admitted was borrowed from Seinfeld’s character the Soup-Nazi. He had been taking on the job of unilaterally blocking websites.

This is not the first time I’ve heard folks holding my position of technology director in other districts described in less than endearing terms. One librarian refers to her tech director as “Bob God.” I heard a teacher refer to her district’s technology department as the “Education Prevention Department.” And of course there are those other names that shouldn’t appear in a professional publication.

Tech directors have two strikes against them coming out of the box. First, educators have not always embraced technology (not to state the obvious or anything.) Its complex and often unreliable nature makes it a source of irritation more than delight. Second, we techies have an appreciation of the vulnerability of the equipment we are charged with maintaining that normal people simply don’t. We see those viruses, hackers, software conflicts, power-surges, and SUDs (stupid user dysfunctions) that are always surrounding the fort, waiting for the smallest breach, and then sneaking in and wreaking havoc.

I, for one, would be heart-broken if I thought my nickname was Tech-Nazi or Doug God. Good working relations with people are as important to me as the good working order of computers. And I beleive it is possible to have both if technology use policies are collaboratively developed.

By its very nature, policy and rule making is influenced by human values. Nowhere in schools is this more evident than when it comes to the selection of teaching resources.

Controversies have swirled around textbook content (intelligent design in science texts), book censorship (Harry Potter’s place in our libraries), and video content (a film’s R-rating automatically earning it exclusion from the curriculum). Public schools’ parents and community members can be at both ends of the political and religious spectrum. As Larry Cuban suggests in his book How Can I Fix It?: Finding Solutions and Managing Dilemmas (Teachers College Press, 2001) such values conflicts present not a solvable problems, but an on-going dilemma that needs ongoing management.

Access to the vast resources of the Internet has added a twist to the selection of ideas and images readily available to students while in school. Without using a filter, the Internet is an either/or proposition - either students have ready access to all of its content or none of it. Given that valuable, arguably essential, resources are available only online, not giving students Internet access is educationally unsound. Given that inappropriate, and arguably dangerous, materials are also available through this medium, giving students complete Internet access is educationally irresponsible.

There is little disagreement that Web sites that are prurient in nature should be blocked. Most educators would agree Web sites designed especially for students should be available. The problem is that the great bulk of sites fall somewhere on a continuum between these two extremes. When the Internet is filtered at a district or even regional level, both high school seniors and preschoolers have the same degree of access.

Maintaining both the concept of intellectual freedom and providing a healthy and educational online environment may seem to be a difficult balancing act. But some districts seem to have been able to both meet the requirements of CIPA and give staff and students access to the greatest possible range of online resources by providing a mechanism for all stakeholders to have a voice in policy-making decisions

Values issues often play out in very tangible ways. A high school social studies teacher may want students to analyze a hate group site and compare it to the Nazi movement, while a parent group wants such sites blocked. A librarian, tired of keeping students from accessing games, may want all such sites blocked, while an elementary teacher uses game sites that reinforce math skills. A language arts teacher might encourage students to use e-mail to contact experts on term paper topics, but the district has “banned” student e-mail. And students themselves see chat as a vital means of communication and collaboration while many educators see it only as a frivolous time-waster.

A Formal Decision-Making Group
Policies, rules and guidelines related to filtering need to be created through a formal, collaborative process undertaken by a group consisting of educators, students, technicians and community members. Such a group, whether a policy committee, technology advisory group or a building site team, needs to address the following issues and make recommendations to the school board and administration.

  1. Whether a filter should be used, which filter should be used, and how the filter should be initially configured;
  2. How requests for sites to be either unblocked or blocked are handled;
  3.  By whom, how and under what circumstances filters can be overridden;
  4. How the effectiveness of the district’s filtering practices and policies are evaluated; and
  5. How other practices that help ensure appropriate student access are developed and used.

Facilitating Informed Decision-Making
Like all policy decisions, those helping construct them should have good information about the national and state laws and local school board policies regarding student Internet access; what types of filters are available and the strategies they use to identify sites to be blocked; research (and opinion) on the efficacy of filtering software; and local network and hardware configurations.

Policy-making groups need to understand the requirements of the Childhood Protection Internet Protection Act <www.ntia.doc.gov/ntiahome/ntiageneral/cipa2003/CIPAreport_08142003.htm> and the financial consequences should a district choose not to meet its requirements.
 
Studies, such as “Does Pornography-Blocking Software Block Access to Health Information on the Internet” (JAMA, Dec 11, 2002. < http://www.med.umich.edu/opm/newspage/2002/filter.htm>), that demostrate that even the best filters both over-block and under-block and offer only a partial solution to controlling access to Internet resources should also be made available and discussed. Over reliance (or worse, sole reliance) on filtering programs can lead to a lack of monitoring student use by adults and few efforts to teach good evaluation and selection skills.

And finally, good-decisions should be based on the principles and guidelines of other professional organizations such as the American Library Association as discussed at “ALA’s Web Site on the Children’s Internet Protection Act” <www.ala.org/ala/washoff/WOissues/civilliberties/cipaweb/cipa.htm>.

Access to these documents allows committee members to base arguments on more than “gut-reactions.”

Developing Articulated Filtering Guidelines
Finally, any guidelines, policies or procedures need to be documented, distributed and discussed among all stakeholders. Should questions arise, should school administration, technology administration, or school boards change, there will be no change in practice without a formal re-evaluation. Too often we confuse practice with policy – at our peril.

Effective school leaders have long harnessed the power of building policy ownership through collaborative decision-making. New technologies, tech-savvy students, and vocal publics make good policy creation more important and more challenging than ever. But it can be done.
 

Best Practices
The Mankato Area Public Schools, Mankato, Minn.  have taken measures to create good policies that make sure students and staff can operate in the least restrictive Internet environment possible, keep students safe, and yet meet the requirements of The Children’s Internet Protection Act.

The district offers these recommendations:

  1. Choice of filters is not based on cost or convenience, but on features and customizability. The least restrictive settings of the installed filter are chosen. Filtering (using WebBlocker) is undertaken in only two of 14 categories—sexual acts and gross sexual depictions. E-mail, chat rooms and blog sites are not blocked.
  2. The override lists in our Internet filter are generously used. Library media specialists can override the filter or have access to a machine that is completely unblocked in each media center so that questionably blocked sites can be reviewed and immediately accessed by staff and students if found to be useful. Any teacher or media specialist may have a site unblocked by simply requesting it—no questions asked. The technology department is relieved of the responsibility, beyond correctly installing and configuring the filter, for students accessing possibly inappropriate materials, and all school staff members are still required to continue to monitor students while on the Internet as if no filter were present.
  3. Requests for the blocking of specific Web sites that fall outside the specific parameters of CIPA (obscene, child pornography, or harmful to minors) are treated like any other material challenge. Any request from a staff member, parent or community member that a specific Internet site be blocked, is treated like any other material challenge in the district; the “reconsideration” policy is followed.
  4. Take a proactive approach to ensuring good Internet use by students. Encourage media specialists and classroom teachers to:


Article originally appeared on Doug Johnson Website (http://www.doug-johnson.com/).
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