Missouri Facebook Law: why can鈥檛 teachers and students be friends?
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Signed by Missouri governor Jay Nixon on July 14, and effective Aug. 28, The Amy Hestir Student Protection Act in an effort to restrict opportunities for "sexual misconduct." But the Missouri Teachers Association filed a suit against the state on Aug. 19 and proclaimed the measure deeply unfair.
The text under scrutiny states that "teachers cannot establish, maintain, or use a work-related website unless it is available to school administrators and the child鈥檚 legal custodian, physical custodian, or legal guardian. Teachers also cannot have a non-work-related website that allows exclusive access with a current or former student."
Christina Thomas, a Ladue School District teacher who spearheaded the movement, And there鈥檚 another, more personal reason for her anger: that a section of the law would "prohibit her from communication with her own child."
The case brings up an interesting question: are there parts of youthful development in which teachers shouldn鈥檛 have a role? For example, in light of , which , which may consequently influence identity formation," is it safe to leave students to the world of gossip without older voices to help guide them?
Jesse Dwyer, who taught writing at a New Hampshire college, that since teachers are expected to be public figures, and since their audience is "by definition impressionable," a teacher's duty to young minds is "especially important on Facebook where people are more connected and sharing more often."
In an article for Edutopia, Judith Taack Lanier seems to agree. to become one of "designing and guiding students through engaging learning opportunities." The result, she says, "is that the abstract, inert knowledge that students used to memorize from dusty textbooks comes alive as they participate in the creation and extension of new knowledge."
Drawing the line on where formal education ends is increasingly difficult, but it鈥檚 important to remember that . Impetus for the 'Facebook Law' is still fresh in many people's memory. Missouri teacher Amy Jackson was arrested after a relationship with a student came to light in July, an affair on Facebook. And in May, a substitute teacher in northern New Jersey and engaging in explicit conversation with other pupils on the social networking site.
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