[Year 12 IPM] Digital storage devices - Acceptable usage policy
Joel Walton
ixoye1973 at yahoo.com.au
Fri Jun 2 12:45:17 EST 2006
Hello Damien,
Yes
welcome to a class example of technology moving
ahead of rules and school policies. I dont have the
answers to all of you questions but I can tell you how
we deal with it at our school.
1. Theft of devices.
a. We spell out the possibilities of lost equipment
and we deal with it like any other lost item.
b. Students are not to rely on the USB as the sole
back-up device in case it is lost/stolen/broken. If
that occurs their work is still due the same as
always, they need to realise that technology and
circumstances are not always just or fair. They can
always backup and store on the network drive.
2. Software piracy
a. Still working on
b. Just keeping an eye on
if they breach then we take
action
but this is a reactive instead of a proactive
approach (which I dont like)
3. Using devices to listen to music
a. I work on the premise that you can have the storage
device in class
but as soon as you put in headphones
its mine. The device is for data/work storage and
transfer not a portable jukebox for class
This is
what I have proposed to the staff as a whole and the
feedback is positive
4. Educational value
a. The educational value is purely transportation
nothing more. It only aids in students getting
information to and from school to work at home.
I hope this helps.
Cheers,
Joel Walton
Technology KLA
Shepparton.
________________________________________
From: ipm-bounces at edulists.com.au
[mailto:ipm-bounces at edulists.com.au] On Behalf Of
Damien A-B
Sent: Tuesday, 30 May 2006 10:12 AM
To: 'Year 12 Information Technology Processing and
ManagementTeachers'Mailing List'
Cc: David Smillie
Subject: [Year 12 IPM] Digital storage devices -
Acceptable usage policy
Hi all,
We are trying to come up with an acceptable usage
policy for digital devices and am wondering if other
schools have already come up with something.
We are trying to look at issues such as
1. Theft of such devices
2. Software piracy, either from the school or is the
school going to be liable for not policing copyrighted
material travelling across the network
3. Using these devices to listen to music in class....
if IT teachers allow these devices for storage, in an
IT class, does that lesson the authority other
teachers have to ban them from their classes?
4. What are the educational values of these devices?
Any help on these and are any other issues that I
havent mentioned would be greatly appreciated
Cheers
Damien Atkinson-Buck
IT Department
Keilor Downs College
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