Posted by
Waski_the_Squirrel on Tuesday, January 30, 2007 2:12:45 AM
I seem to be having another one of those sleepless nights. However, it's 11:30 right now. I'm generally doing much better on getting sleep! I suspect I'll have an abbreviated sleep, but still sufficient.
I'm tired enought that I won't try debating any major issues of education. Instead I want to look at the issue of teachers and blogging. I'm tired enough that I don't feel like looking for the article that sparked this.
What the article did was lay out why teachers blog and then look at some of the legal issues. For example, one teacher used her blog to "vent" about students, colleagues, and administrators. She was rather startled to find herself in some hot water over something she did on her own time.
Another teacher had started his blog that way and then (on a sleepless night) had an epiphany. He wondered how he would feel as a parent of a student in his class reading that blog.
Some teachers have had trouble because they discuss internal politics that the schools would prefer to keep silent. I began my blog that way by discussing the negotiations at my previous school. I doubt anyone could argue that I was exposing private internal issues, however. The story was splashed on the front pages of all the major papers in North Dakota and I was quoted by name. I even got hate mail from around the state! Perhaps, had I stayed in that district, there might have been some trouble over the blog, but I believe I was fair.
I think it would be quite different were I to blog on a topic such as hiring a teacher because of personal connections. This would be more like slander or gossip.
The article had very few recommendations for teachers. I'll close this blog by combining some of theirs as well as some of my own for my own blogs. Tomorrow I'll get back into "heavy-duty legislature stuff."
- Be anonymous (I'm not real anonymous. The link to this blog is on my personal webpage and my school webpage. I'm also teaching in a rural state. Anyone who tried could find me. I assume my readers know who I am. I do make sure not to compromise the identity of my school or any people I might reference. I might refer to "an administrator" or "a colleague" rather than something more specific.)
- Don't say anything you'd be embarrassed to have people you know read. (I'm pretty good about this. Some of my late night posts are embarrassing by their rambling nature. Overall, however, what I write here is what I say in person. Perhaps that's why I'm slow to make friends!)
- Never, ever, ever cite a student by name. (This makes great sense. There are some freaks out there who view the Internet as a shopping list for "cute kids." There is also the factor of working with the students after saying something terrible.)
- Never cite anyone by name. (This also makes sense. Unless a statement is a matter of public record, I should respect their privacy. The closest I've come here was the teacher from Squaw Gap, but I identified her no further than she did in her comment.)
- Never tell where you live and teach (It would be easier if I lived in California or New York. How many people in North Dakota don't know which school had its negoations splashed all over the newspaper? If I'm now in a remote part of Western North Dakota, which school is it? (not many choices) Although this does compromise my anonymity somewhat, it does keep me honest.)
- Don't vent (I know I sometimes sound like I'm venting, but it's usually after the fact. I posted my blog about negotiations in my previous district well after my public explosion that was carried on the radio and printed in the newspapers. I'm much more sensible in writing than I am in speaking. I hadn't even planned to speak that night.)
- Have something good to say (I find it easy to despair and be depressing. Although some of my blogs are depressing, I try to balance it with hope, solutions, alternatives, and good things. I'm trying to do this in my life as well. A few years ago I scared myself with how depressed I got, and last year I came close to that. I really have to work sometimes to keep myself out of that.)
So there you have it, a late-night blog written by an insomniac! Now that I have these rules in writing, I have to work even harder to make sure I follow them. I do know I have at least two readers: my father and the entire teaching staff of Squaw Gap. I suspect there may be others as well!