Why Twitter is great in the classroom. A great article with a nice set of videos and some good tips on using Twitter in class.
Why Twitter is great in the classroom. A great article with a nice set of videos and some good tips on using Twitter in class.
Here’s a list of online apps (games, chat, forums, social networks, blogs) with the age restrictions as seen in the sites’ terms of service/use. I made this list because I needed a list to show some teachers what they could/could not use with their students depending on age. This list is by no means complete, just a few online apps I’ve heard about.
This is purely informational. I haven’t tried them all, so I can’t say how well they safeguard minors. It’s best to be thorough and try them out properly yourself. YMMV
Ones I’ve tried and I think are good, though not with age restrictions in mind: Wordpress, Blogger, Facebook, Ning, Club Penguin, FreeRealms, Writeboard, 21Classes, PBwiki & Delicious.
RPG = Role Playing Game
Must be at least 16
Must be at least 13 and in high school
Must be over 13
Download & install application required
No Age minimum specified, but require parental approval
Download & install application required
I couldn’t find anything definitive about age restrictions on Wikispaces, EduBlogs or 21Classes, but considering that they’re aimed at teachers and learners, I’m guessing that they must be OK for all ages?? I couldn’t find anything in PBworks’ (PBwiki), or Delicious‘ Terms of Service mentioning age either.
As a rule of thumb, when checking out an online tool that you might want to use with younger learners, check the Terms of Service (sometimes called Terms of Use) and their privacy policy. This should be somewhere on the homepage (usually at the bottom). Then do an inline search (hit Ctrl+F) for ‘years’ or ‘guardian’ or ‘13′ or something like that to jump to the bit about age restrictions, and then read the small print.
By the way, blogging tool tumblr. requires subscribers to be over 18.
And thanks to Denis for helping me with the list.
Jay Cross has some interesting stuff here from a Forester Analyst Click for The ladder of participation in social media
I doubt the validity of the results without more detail. A bit contentious to say that people in China participate more in social media than Europeans without some supporting data. Entirely possible, but some data to back up the figures would be good.
Seesmic is like instant messaging with video. Or twitter with video. Basically, you have asynchronous conversations with other people by leaving your video postings on the Seesmic site. It’s a form of micro-blogging.
I reckon this could be quite fun to use with students.
Worth a look: