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The Board of School Trustees of Dillon School District One recognizes
that as technologies affect the manner in which informat
The
Board of School Trustees of Dillon School District One recognizes that as
technologies affect the manner in which information may be accessed,
communicated and transferred by members of society, those changes may also
alter instruction and student learning. Telecommunications, electronic
information services and networked services significantly alter the information
landscape by opening schools, classrooms and library media centers to a broader
array of resources. The Board generally supports access by students to rich
information resources along with the development by staff of appropriate skills
to analyze and evaluate such resources.
In
making decisions regarding student access to telecommunications and networked
information resources, Dillon School District One considers its own stated
educational mission, goals and objectives. Dillon School District One’s policy
requires that all instructional and library media materials support and enrich
the curriculum while taking into account the varied instructional needs,
learning styles, abilities and developmental levels of the students.
Telecommunications, including video, audio and text services, because they may
be connected to any publicly available source in the world, will open
classrooms to electronic information resources which may not have been
specifically chosen or previewed for use by students of various ages.
In
particular, the Internet is a collection of interconnected computer networks
around the world that makes it possible to share information almost instantly.
The networks are owned by countless commercial, research, governmental and
educational organizations. The Internet expands classroom and library media
center resources by making information, images and even computer software from
places otherwise impossible to reach available to students, teachers,
librarians and media specialists. Access to these resources can yield
individual and group projects, collaboration, curriculum materials and idea
sharing. Internet access also makes contact with people all over the world,
bringing into the classroom experts in every content area.
The
following principles guide student access to networked information resources:
- Responsibility: Access is a
privilege, not a right. Access entails responsibility.
- The Board expects
that staff will integrate thoughtful use of networked information
resources throughout the curriculum.
- Student access from
the Dillon School District One network to telecommunications and
networked information resources shall be used for educational uses.
- Since access could
extend beyond evaluated or previewed resources, the staff will supervise
and provide developmentally appropriate guidance and instruction to
students in the appropriate and effective use of such resources.
- Students are responsible
for good behavior on school computer networks, just as in classrooms and
other areas of the school corporation. Communications on networks are
often public in nature.
- Outside of school,
families are responsible for setting and conveying the same standards
that their children exercise in the use of television, telephones, radio,
movies and other media to the use of telecommunications and networked
information resources. Therefore, Dillon School District One supports and
respects each family's decision whether or not to apply for student
access and to request alternative activities not requiring access.
- The educational value
of student networked information resources access is the joint
responsibility of students, parents, and employees of the school
corporation.
- Rights and Privileges: The network services
are provided for educationally-related communication, research and other
activities. Access to Dillon School District One network services will be
provided to students who agree to act in a considerate and responsible
manner.
- Students will submit
a properly signed Acceptable Use Agreement, which includes staff and
parental/guardian permission, to the network administrator.
- A network account
will include a username and private password, assuring that access is the
responsibility of the student. In some cases, the Dillon School District
One system administrator may issue a limited "class" account to
groups of students, which may be used for specific purposes for a
specific amount of time.
- Each student or
"class" with network access shall be assigned storage space on
the corresponding file servers, which may be treated like school lockers.
- Network security is
designed to allow access to these spaces only by the assigned user;
however, network administrators may review files and communications to
maintain system integrity and insure that users are using the system
responsibly.
- Users should not
expect that files stored on district resources will always be private.
- Restrictions: The following activities are not permitted on
Dillon School District One network and electronic resources:
- Third-party email
(such as AOL, Yahoo, MSN, Hotmail, etc.) music, music videos, games of a
non-educational background, personals sites, chat sites (unless as a
pre-approved teacher project), and other sites deemed by the school and
district as non-educational or offensive in content value.
- Accessing, uploading,
downloading, transmitting, displaying, or distributing obscene or
sexually explicit material; transmitting obscene, abusive, or sexually
explicit language.
- Damaging computers,
computer systems or computer networks; vandalizing, damaging or disabling
the property of another person or organization; debilitating or disabling
computers, systems or networks through the intentional mis- or overuse of
electronic distribution or the spreading of computer "viruses"
through the inappropriate use of files or diskettes.
- Violating copyright,
or otherwise using another person's intellectual property without his or
her prior approval or proper citation; using another person's passwords;
trespassing in another person's folders, work or files.
- Violating local,
state or federal statute.
- Disclaimers: Dillon School District One makes no
warranties of any kind, either expressed or implied, for the access being
provided.
- The staff, the school
and Dillon School District One are not responsible for any damages
incurred, including, but not limited to, loss of data resulting from
delays or interruption of service, for the loss of data stored on Dillon
School District One network resources, or for personal property used to
access Dillon School District One resources.
- Dillon School
District One will not be responsible for the accuracy, nature, or quality
of information stored on Dillon School District One resources or gathered
through corporation-provided access.
- Dillon School
District One will not be responsible for unauthorized financial
obligations resulting from use of district-provided access.
- Further, even though Dillon School District One uses technical
or manual means to regulate access and information, these methods do not
provide a foolproof means for enforcing the provisions of this policy.
- Sanctions: Disciplinary action related to student access
to electronic resources may be determined at the building and/or classroom
level in accordance with existing practice regarding inappropriate
language or behavior, as stated in policies and guidelines contained in
the schools Student Conduct Handbook.
- Violations of the
school and/or Dillon School District One acceptable use policies may
result in a loss of access to electronic resources.
- Additional sanctions
for inappropriate behavior and communication shall be governed by Student
Conduct Handbook.
- When appropriate, law
enforcement agencies may be involved.
The
Board authorizes the Office of the Superintendent to prepare appropriate
Guidelines for implementing this policy and for reviewing and evaluating its
effect on instruction and student achievement. Both the Policy and the
Guidelines shall be available for review by parents, guardians, students,
staff, and other members of the community. Further, all provisions of both
Policy and the Guidelines are subordinate to local, state and federal statute.
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