Teachers blocked from web tools
The demand for social media in schools has been made apparent in some new research we’ve commissioned, as have the road-blocks that are preventing its more rapid take up. Here’s the full press release and results:
Facebook, Twitter and You Tube blocked in the classroom despite teacher demand
UK teachers are being stifled in their classroom creativity by outdated restrictions on IT usage according to new research released today by social media education company, Magic Studio (www.magicstudio.co.uk).
Three quarters of teachers want to bring User Generated Content (UGC) sites such as You Tube into their teaching and nearly half (42%) want to introduce social media tools such as Twitter or Facebook into the classroom. However, over-protective IT policies mean that 57% are blocked from accessing UGC sites and 68% from social media sites.
The potential benefits of social media in the classroom are clearly recognised by teachers, with 63% of respondents saying that they felt these technologies would increase pupil’s engagement with learning.
The sorts of services being demanded by teachers were clear. 50% of respondents wanted to use YouTube in the classroom; 17% Facebook; 16% Flickr; 10% Bebo and 10% wanted to deploy the emergent ‘micro-blogging’ service Twitter.
Martyn Farrows, Director of Magic Studio, said: “Kids are using social media all the time, every day in their home lives then, when they get into school, they’re suddenly asked to forget all about that and go back 10 years in terms of the types of media they’re consuming. How do we expect kids to really engage with learning if we’re talking to them in a way that has no relevance to their ordinary modes of communication?
“Some of these restrictions are in place because of outdated concerns over security. However there’s now a swathe of tools and services can bring the power of social media into the classroom in a safe and constructive way. Simply blocking these services is a blunt tool that’s killing off the massive potential of social media in an educational environment.”
The research was based on a poll of teachers on the schoolzone.co.uk website in April 2009.
FULL RESULTS
What level do you teach at?
Primary – 52.7%
Secondary – 47.3%
Do you or do you want to use online, user generated content tools (YouTube, Flickr etc.) as part of your teaching?
I want to – 38.2%
I already do – 38.2%
No – 23.6%
Do you or do you want to use online social networking tools (e.g. twitter, facebook etc.) as part of your teaching?
I want to – 30%
I already do – 11.8%
No – 58.2%
If yes, what tools specifically do you/would you like to use?
You Tube – 50%
Flickr – 16%
Bebo – 10%
MySpace – 6%
Twitter – 10%
Facebook – 17%
Are you prevented from using some or all of these tools in your teaching (e.g. by Local Authority IT policy etc.)?
User generated content – 57%
Social networking – 68%
What impact do you think the introduction of these familiar online tools would have on pupils?
Better concentration – 14%
More engagement with learning – 63%
Less unruly behaviour – 2.2%
More distractions – 30.1%
Misuse of services – 33.3%
If no, why don’t you want to use them?
Don’t understand them – 4.3%
Can’t see how they’d work in lessons – 24.7%
Concerned about security/safety – 35.5%
Don’t have the technical resources – 5.4%
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