MountainLaurel
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Mon Apr-28-08 09:27 AM
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When Young Teachers Go Wild on the Web |
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It's almost like Googling someone: Log on to Facebook. Join the Washington, D.C., network. Search the Web site for your favorite school system. And then watch the public profiles of 20-something teachers unfurl like gift wrap on the screen, revealing a sense of humor that can be overtly sarcastic or unintentionally unprofessional -- or both.
One Montgomery County special education teacher displayed a poster that depicts talking sperm and invokes a slang term for oral sex. One woman who identified herself as a Prince William County kindergarten teacher posted a satiric shampoo commercial with a half-naked man having an orgasm in the shower. A D.C. public schools educator offered this tip on her page: "Teaching in DCPS -- Lesson #1: Don't smoke crack while pregnant."
Just to be clear, these are not teenagers, the typical Internet scofflaws and sources of ceaseless discussion about cyber-bullying, sexual predators and so on. These are adults, many in their 20s, who are behaving, for the most part, like young adults.
But the crudeness of some Facebook or MySpace teacher profiles, which are far, far away from sanitized Web sites ending in ".edu," prompts questions emblematic of our times: Do the risque pages matter if teacher performance is not hindered and if students, parents and school officials don't see them? At what point are these young teachers judged by the standards for public officials? http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/04/27/AR2008042702213.html?hpid=topnews
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Pawel K
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Mon Apr-28-08 09:30 AM
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1. If I have the right to make an ass out of myself online then they should be allowed to also |
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I don't see what the big deal is.
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NCDem60
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Wed Apr-30-08 09:11 PM
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jobs have been lost over Facebook and MySpace pages. Right or wrong, teachers are held to a higher standard of behavior than the average person.
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madmom
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Mon Apr-28-08 09:33 AM
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2. It's funny the first thing I thought of when reading this was... |
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"These are adults, many in their 20s" these are the same people who called Monica Lewinski (in her 20's) a child, the same who called b*sh 40 something escapades "youthful indiscretions".No wonder people are so freaking confused/ignorant on facts.
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maradonapassion
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Tue May-06-08 09:48 PM
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4. I don't disagree with them having myspace pages |
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As long as they behave in class.
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Sophia_Karina
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Fri May-09-08 12:47 AM
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5. it's a common theme these days: |
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the Net is transparent: everything you do and say can be used against you.
If a teacher were top say in a publicly heard conversation: "Teaching in DCPS -- Lesson #1: Don't smoke crack while pregnant." -- yeah, that suggest immaturity and lack of professionalism, y, and yeah, I wouldn't think this person is fit for the job unless he\she proves it otherwise.
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Fri Apr 26th 2024, 11:25 AM
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