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Larry Magid

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Can YouTube for Schools Usher Education Into the 21st Century

Posted: 12/14/2011 1:31 pm

Google has launched a YouTube for Schools service to make educationally relevant videos available for use in school. It's a great idea, but for it to actually be used in schools, many districts around the country will have to modify their filters to allow teachers to access at least this portion of YouTube.

Most schools have some type of filters in place designed to block pornography and other inappropriate material, and it's common for these filters to also block social media, including all of Facebook, MySpace and YouTube. Schools that accept federal E-rate funding are required to block materials that are obscene, depict child pornography or are harmful to minors -- but there is nothing in the federal rules that require schools to block social media.

Treat social media like books and sports

It's a good thing schools don't treat books and sports the way most treat social media.

There have always been books that are inappropriate for a school setting. But rather than ban all books, schools allow the ones that support their curricula and encourage children to explore literature in general. When it comes to sports, schools recognize that there are dangers -- every year, lots of children are injured and some die from sports related injuries. But rather than ban sports, schools embrace them and make sure that kids have good coaches, safety equipment and rules to ensure fair play.

Of course we could just let the kids play in the street without any training, Of course we could just let the kids play in the street without any training, supervision or mandatory safety equipment. That's how many schools approach social media -- including such things as videos on YouTube or resources on social networking sites.

It's not as if kids are staying away from social media just because they can't use it at school. They're using it at home, at friends' houses and -- via their mobile devices -- anywhere they happen to be. It's not as if kids are staying away from social media just because they can't use it at school. They're using it at home, at friends' houses and -- via their mobile devices -- anywhere they happen to be. Their non-school hours are filled with use of technology and social media. Maybe schools ought to put a sign at the front gate that reads, "You are now leaving the 21st century."

Teachers and parents as social media partners

It's time for teachers -- and parents -- to become young people's partners in the use of social media. Just as we teach reading and supplement the use of books with great mentors in the classroom and encourage fair play and skill development with coaches on the athletic field, we need to incorporate educators into our kids' use of social media.

I'm not suggesting that kids be allowed to polish off their Facebook profiles in school or dish the dirt with their online friends while they should be paying attention in class. But completely blocking domains like Facebook.com or YouTube.com denies kids access to some incredibly useful material.

There are thousands of Facebook pages dedicated to a wide variety of subjects that can be used in schools. If you search for "Facebook education," you'll find links to numerous ways that Facebook and other social media can help teachers supplement their existing materials. One article that comes up in that search, "100 Ways You Should be Using Facebook in Your Classroom" lists some incredibly useful projects like encouraging kids to follow news feeds relevant to course material, share book reviews, practice a foreign language, create their own news source, keep up with politicians, post class notes, brainstorm and lots more.

Even more than Facebook, Google's YouTube can be an incredibly useful resource in school. Sure, there are plenty of inappropriate videos on the user-supplied service. But there is also a wealth of resources from a very wide variety of sources, including the Smithsonian Institution, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, UC Berkeley, PBS, TEDTalks and the amazing educational videos from Kahn Academy, which are used in schools throughout the world. You can find some of this material -- along with tips on how to use YouTube in the classroom -- at YouTube.com/teachers.

Because many schools simply ban YouTube, these incredible resources are not available for use in the classroom. Kids can watch them at home or on the way to school via the mobile devices, but not on school computers. Preventing distractions such as videos of cats dancing on a piano or keeping kids from age-inappropriate videos in school makes sense, but not at the expense of preventing kids and teachers from accessing a vast library of educationally sound videos.

As part of the launch of "YouTube for Schools" (schools can sign up at youtube.com/schools), Google is encouraging school districts to open up their filters so that teachers can access YouTube.com/edu. Hopefully school administrators will see the value in this and find ways to unblock at least this portion of YouTube.

Disclosure: Larry Magid is co-director of ConnectSafely.org, a nonprofit Internet safety organization that receives financial support from Facebook and Google.

This article also appeared in the San Jose Mercury News and on SafeKids.com.

 

Follow Larry Magid on Twitter: www.twitter.com/larrymagid

Google has launched a YouTube for Schools service to make educationally relevant videos available for use in school. It's a great idea, but for it to actually be used in schools, many districts around...
Google has launched a YouTube for Schools service to make educationally relevant videos available for use in school. It's a great idea, but for it to actually be used in schools, many districts around...
 
 
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MarvinM
Where's the Ka-Boom?
11:25 AM on 12/18/2011
My school doesn't block YouTube, and I have begun using a few resources there, but am concerned about the ads (kids get enough advertisements, I don't need to direct them to more) and also the comments sections which at anytime could have comments I don't particularly think my students should have to see. And of course I have no control over when new comments come up, and certainly don't have time to keep checking!

Would this new section of YouTube not have commercials or comment? If yes, I would be more interested in using more YouTube sources.
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tazmodious
Left Hand of Darkness
03:17 PM on 12/16/2011
Provide students with some targeted websites and resources and they do very well on a research project. Tell them to just go on the web to research information and they get lost, the information they find is poor and the work completed is shotty at best.

As Akla said below, tech types are well meaning but quite often they don't understand what is really useful for students.
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Akla
Leave No Trace, Just a Good Impression
01:14 PM on 12/15/2011
Nothing useful on the social media sites that is not available on other sites. And please apply some of that technology stuff to your posts so that they are readable without all of the mistakes. As for the devices, all should be banned during instructional time so that the student can focus on the material at hand. Equating large amounts of available content with instructional materials is an error often made by tech types. And just because it captures attention because it moves and is pretty does not mean it improves comprehension or learning.
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amva55
South Floridian in GA
10:42 AM on 12/15/2011
Mr. Megid what is good about social media? It just a waste of time, I don't use it, never has and never will and I am not suffering anything for it.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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10:13 AM on 12/15/2011
Opening up such sites will create a stampede away from the intended task, not toward. I'll bet most teachers would agree... especially those in the urban public schools.
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David Campbell
09:45 AM on 12/15/2011
Agreed! Here is what what you're up against:
Teachers teaching class lessons.
Rows of desks to listen & write things.
Tests that measure memorization and guessing rather than understanding.
Text books instead of real books.
Too much talk and not enough discovering on your own from available technology.
Almost no critical/high order thinking & learning, instead:drill & kill-talk& chalk-sit & listen.
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tazmodious
Left Hand of Darkness
03:09 PM on 12/16/2011
You can thank NCLB for all of that.
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LPH
It's more fun when you put your arms up like this.
06:39 PM on 12/18/2011
No. You can thank uncreative teachers. This is because any higher order thinking begins with memorization of basic facts, ideas, and opposing opinions. You can't run a marathon without first getting off the couch, yet, teachers want to jump from the basics up to higher level thinking. No learner can achieve that leap without a lot of energy.
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tazmodious
Left Hand of Darkness
08:22 PM on 12/14/2011
As a teacher, I already have a password to unblock content from the web that I can show to my class if it is useful and appropriate. Plus we have other web resources that are very good, like Discovery United Streaming and all PBS programs all available to stream for free from the PBS website.

Kids don't need anymore electronic distractions in school, they have more than enough already.
03:23 PM on 12/14/2011
I think one thing we haven't fully studied is the effect of distraction on education. I love facebook and Youtube, but I think a bigger problem than the types of content is the distraction problem. Studies show it takes at least 3 minutes of sustained attention to understand something. I know I can't get that on Facebook...YouTube for education, maybe. Our job as educators is to not just think about the content but the experience.