" ... that proper education about appropriate online behavior and digital media consumption can help children evaluate potential online risks. The group suggested that the government “promote nationwide education in digital citizenship and media literacy as the cornerstone of internet safety.”Recommendations include creating a web-based clearinghouse of online safety education research, avoiding scare tactics, promoting digital citizenship at all grade levels, establishing industry best practices for effective internet safety education programs, and looking to young people as experts in the online and digital media arenas by involving them in risk-prevention education.Awareness efforts should be ongoing, and stakeholders should “promote greater transparency for parents as to what sort of content and information will be accessible and recorded with a given product when their child is online,” recommended a subcommittee on parental controls and child protection technology.
Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project reports the following:
12% of all students say they can have their cellphones at school at any time.
62% of all students say they can have their cellphones in school, just not in class.
24% of teenagers attend schools that ban all cellphones from school grounds.
• 65% of cellphone-owning teenagers at schools that completely ban phones bring their phones to school every day.
• 58% of cellphone-owning teenagers at schools that ban phones have sent a text message during class.


Collegiate High School Principal Tracie Rodriguez said the science and English departments use texting the most with class assignments. Teachers can choose whether they want students to text them. The trend began with a student asking if it would be OK for them to text their teacher, she said.She said at one time students were coming to class with incomplete assignments and texting was a way for the students to feel comfortable with getting in touch with teachers outside of class, she said.
The school does still enforce a rule that cell phones can’t be used in class unless approved beforehand as part of a class assignment or in an emergency, she said.In addition, parents haven’t expressed concerns about their student’s cell phone bills or texting charges, she said.


Based on a survey and focus groups conducted with teenagers between 12 and 17, Pew found that text messaging is by far the most common way that kids communicate with each other, more than chatting on the phone, e-mailing, using social-networking sites, or talking face to face.More than 75 percent of teens now own cell phones, notes Pew, up from just 45 percent in 2004. Around 72 percent of all teens, or 88 percent of teens who own mobile phones, use text messages to communicate. That marks a big jump from 2006 when only 51 percent of teens texted on their phones.
The survey also had some things to say about cell phones in school:
Teachers aren't wild about the use of cell phones either, and as a result, many schools limit or ban their use. Around 24 percent of teens said their school bans all cell phones from the campus entirely, while 62 percent said they're allowed to bring a phone to school but not into the classroom.
But 65 percent of teens whose schools exclude cell phones from campus said they bring them anyway, and 58 percent of them said they've sent text messages in class despite the ban. Meanwhile, kids have come up with ways to avoid having their phones taken away. One teen surveyed said he has a real phone and a fake phone so that if the teacher catches him, he can give her the fake phone.
This research underscores what I have been saying for the past year. Students love their cell phones and regardless of the prohibitions schools put on their phones they are using them anyway during the school day. Schools need to accept this reality and start embracing student cell phones and using them as part of the instructional activities.
This post on the Mobile Learner blog talks about ways to get instant feedback from students during a lesson. The following is from the article:
This is where the text message comes in. Text messaging has the advantage of being a private way for students to provide feedback. It allows for an instructional correspondence to take place and allows the teacher to know who is understanding the material and who is not. Of course, teacher may be very uncomfortable sharing their phone number with students and this is a very legitimate concern. This is where services such as Polleverywhere come in. This pay-service allows teacher to poll students using text messaging to an intermediary so that neither the teacher nor the student has to share their personal information with each other.
I think this is a great idea. I basically said the same thing last week in my Cell Phone Centric Classroom post, though I recommended using Google Voice. Using Google Voice a teacher does not have to give their cell phone number to the students, so it keeps their personal number private. Follow the link above to read the entire article.
This article on Scholastic.com gives advice on how to handle cell phones in the classroom. What I found interesting was the section on using cell phones as part of the lesson. Below is an excerpt from the article:
DO Use Texting to Teach Summarizing
Jennifer Kuszmerski, a language arts teacher, uses text messaging to invite students to summarize what they've learned in a given class period. To close a lesson, ask students, "If you had to text what you learned today to one of your friends, what would you say?" "Texts are short bursts of information that get to the point quickly, and students understand that," says Kuszmerski. "If a student can summarize what he or she learned in a sentence or two, it's easy to see if your objective has been met for the day."
DO Use Texting to Discuss Language
To teach students the formal rules of writing, write a sentence on the board, such as "Can you come to my Valentine's Day party?" Ask students to translate the sentence into a text message (i.e., "v-day party 2-nite u should come"). Then, ask them to rewrite that same sentence as if it were in an e-mail to a teacher. ("Ms. Walker, would you like to come to my Valentine's Day party on Thursday night?") Considering audience and revising for tone teaches kids that different forms of writing are appropriate at different times. Marika Dietsch, a seventh-grade language arts teacher, also uses text-speak to demonstrate how language evolves. "My students can't believe that Shakespeare is considered modern English!" says Dietsch. "We talk about how language changes over time, and they make the connection to the abbreviations they use for texting."
I think these are some creative ways to use cell phones as part of a lesson. Has anyone else used texting in this way or in some other way to support a particular lesson? Follow the link above to read the full article.
The BBC's education service Janala is delivering English lessons via mobile phones to users in Bangladesh. Since the service was launched in November 2009, over 1 million lessons have been accessed. Bangladesh has 50 million mobile users within it's borders. The service offers hundreds of three-minute audio lessons and SMS (Text) quizzes to the users for a nominal fee. The service is accessed by dialing "3000" and choosing from the menu of options. The BBC has a website that compliments the service and gives users free access to content.
The goal of the BBC in creating the service was to bring English language learning to the masses because it is the international language of business.
More than two-thirds of people who use the beginners' service return, which is impressive considering the 5% "return rate" for mobile products in Bangladesh. The BBC said overall 39% of callers returned to Janala.
An impressive majority of Bangladeshis – 84% – consider English essential to securing a good job and educating their children, according to a BBC survey.
"We knew demand for English was strong in Bangladesh, but the response to BBC Janala has been nothing short of phenomenal," said Chamberlain.
"The growth of mobile is clearly creating an opportunity to provide access to education in a way simply not possible before."
The last quote from the article is the most compelling. The technology is providing a service that would be impossible without the technology. This is just one of many examples I have read about over the last few months that highlights how mobile phones are being used to educate people in very poor countries where internet access via a computer is not the norm or cost prohibitive.
Students text a report with a log of the 4Ws: Who, What, Where and When to a dedicated number and the report is then instantly forwarded to the appropriate person(s) mobile phone so they can respond in a timely manner. The report is also automatically forwarded via email to the school counsellor or principal.
The FrontlineSMS:BullyProof software comes preloaded with a database of tips and strategies for students that can be accessed by sending the keyword 'bully tip 1,2,3,4 'etc to a dedicated number. The FrontlineSMS:BullyProof software contains a database of local resources, crisis services and helplines that students can access anytime via a keyword or teachers can forward to students and or parents.

ABC News is reporting that a new program is set to begin that uses text messages to expectant mothers to improve their childrens health. The program's sponsers include Johnson & Johnson, Pfizer, WellPoint and CareFirst BlueCross and Blue Shield. Additionally, wireless carriers including AT&T, Verizon and Sprint have agreed to waive fees for the text4baby messages. The organizers of the program say:
...texting is an effective means of delivering wellness tips because 90 percent of people in the U.S. have cell phones.
"Especially if you start talking about low-income people, cell phones are the indispensable tool for reaching them and engaging them about their health," said Paul Meyer, president of Voxiva, a company which operates health texting programs in Africa, Latin America and India.
Mothers who want to use the service need to text the message to "BABY" to 511411. These moms will receive a weekly text message timed to their due date or the baby's birth date.
This article on the BBC News website reports that according to a study at the University of Coventry "texting" can actually help students with spelling. The study of 8 - 12 year-olds found that in order to create the terms used in "texting" students have to understand the original use of the word.
The research, part-funded by the British Academy, suggests that texting requires the same "phonological awareness" needed to learn correct spellings.
So when pupils replace or remove sounds, letters or syllables - such as "l8r" for "later" or "hmwrk" for "homework" - it requires an understanding of what the original word should be.
"If we are seeing a decline in literacy standards among young children, it is in spite of text messaging, not because of it," said Clare Wood, reader in developmental psychology.
This is an interesting finding given that some other experts think "texting" hurt students abilities to write. I sometimes wonder if the incessant way teenagers text is going to hurt them in some way down the road. I am not sure what to make of it yet as I have read research on both sides of the issue.

Thanks to Ben Wilkoff for sharing how he has used Textmarks and Text the Mob with some students in his school district. Textmarks is a service I was familiar with but never really understood how it all worked. Ben helped clear that up. You can use Textmarks to create a distribution list to send out alerts via text messages, it can be used for collaboration amongst a group of students, a coach could use it to contact all the team members about upcoming events, or a teacher could use it to keep track of a group of students on a field trip. Ben used it to conduct a scavenger hunt for over 100 students in downtown Denver. The scavenger hunt was designed to have the students learn the history of Denver while playing the game. Textmarks uses SMS messages to communicate and is free. Follow the link for more details.
Text the Mob is similar to Poll Everywhere. You can use it to assess understanding with a classroom full of students, or use it conduct back-channel conversations. It seems to be more generous it what it allows users to do for free than Poll Everywhere. It does provide real time polling updates. Earlier this year I used Poll Everywhere to conduct a quick survey during one of our faculty meetings. It worked very well. I plan on using Text the Mob the next time I conduct a survey to see how it performs.
Amazon is letting a select few of it's customers pilot a new system that sends text messages when their package is shipped and when it is delivered.
If you frequently check online for the status of your Amazon orders then you might want to check this service out.
This is just another example of the mainstream acceptance of text messaging. More and more it is becoming the communication medium that people are using.
from jkontherun
