Ever wondered how to keep kids safe online? While the internet is a powerful resource, my anxiety over the filth and trouble my children might accidentally uncover while exploring the web outweighs my enthusiasm for the richness of its more worthwhile content. Supervised access and the use of internet content (or web) filters such as Bsecure, Net Nanny, and others might help keep children from accessing unacceptable content (whether accidentally or not), they don’t automatically give kids the knowledge and wisdom they need to be safe on the internet when they are out of immediate parental supervision. Parents may install the best filter in the world on their home computer, but the filter is absolutely powerless to protect the child if he or she is using the computer at the library or at a friend’s house. Besides this, as everyone knows, the internet is a host to dangers and troubles not necessarly related to content and web sites that may easily be filtered.

That’s why it’s essential that we alert our children to the trouble lurking on the internet and teach them to use the internet safely and productively. One excellent resourse that can be used by parents and teachers is CyberSmart. CyberSmart offers free grade-appropriate K-12 curriculum that teaches children and teenage students the essentials of being “SMART” online:

  • S—Safety and Security Online
  • M—Manners and Cybercitizenship
  • A—Authentic Learning and Creativity
  • R—Research and Information Fluency
  • T—Twenty-First Century Challenges

I reviewed just two of the nine active lessons designed for grades 9-12 (another eight lessons are still in development) and found them very worthwhile. The lesson “Making Good Decisions” is related to “Safety and Security Online” and includes an eleven-question true/false quiz related to internet predators and their modus operandi that even a supposedly astute adult will find challenging to pass (I only scored 6 of 11 correct). Both the quiz and the lesson are useful for talking teens through the reality of the threat and also the specific online behaviors that put teens most at risk to be the next victim.

The lesson ideas provided may be used independently or to support existing curriculum and anti-racism education initiatives in your state or territory. Lessons can be viewed by learning area, theme or age. Common Sense Education provides educators and students with the resources they need to harness the power of technology for learning and life. Find a free K-12 Digital Citizenship curriculum, reviews of popular EdTech apps, and resources for protecting student privacy. Education, creators of the popular CyberSmart! Student Curriculum and CyberSmart! Online Workshops for educators developed these activities keeping in mind that to encourage behavioral change, students must define and “own” the issues for themselves. Elementary/Middle School Classroom Materials Password Security Activity and Posters.

The lesson “Evaluating Online Resources” falls under “Research and Information Fluency” and teaches students the differences between online and print resources, and how to evaluate the content and accuracy of online resources. Since many students have easier access to online resources than to traditional print resources like those usually found in a library (especially when they wait to the last minute before they begin their research!) this is an important skill to master.

So, be smart…CyberSmart, and educate your children in the safe and wise use of the internet.

by Lynn K. McMullin
The building principals, Kevin Case, Ed Hoyt, and I often hear, “You must love summer! It’s got to be so quiet without the kids and teachers!”
In truth, the summer -- especially this summer! -- is anything but ‘quiet.’ Granted it is a very different kind of work, and what we do in the summer is very exciting, because we see the changes happen right before our eyes. So much gets done that I thought it might be fun to share with you what we have accomplished while you were away.
We Hired New Staff!

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We have many new staff members, and I can tell you unequivocally that everyone in this district recognizes there is no more important summer task than hiring the right people. Because, this district’s strengths are its people, we don’t rush the process or take short cuts.
Most of our employees had a series of two or three interviews, and many of the teachers taught a summer school class in Canton to demonstrate their classroom expertise. Did you know the advertisement for elementary teaching positions attracted over 400 applications? By the second week in August, we had hired 9 new teachers, 11 paras and tutors, one high school counselor, a new Athletic Director, and a new Administrative Assistant for Cherry Brook. Within a few weeks, after an equally extensive search process, including a site visit, we’ll announce a new Assistant Principal for the High School. To see photographs and introductions of our new staff members, please click on “Welcome New Staff” back on the district website.

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We Developed New Programs!
Over the summer we added a couple of new features -- without spending a dime! – to our programming. The Extended Day Kindergarten PILOT is key among our accomplishments. This is a 100% grant-funded program for about 14 – 15 kindergarten students, and we’re so excited about this new program I’m featuring it as next week’s blog.
But, I’m also excited about two new courses added to the Middle School curriculum. The first is a new course called “Electronic Communications,” based on the CyberSMART curriculum, which teaches students safety, manners, authentic uses, research skills, and twenty-first century readiness. This year all 7th and 8th graders will take the same electronic communications course; next year, all 8th graders will have an application course which will follow-up on this year’s foundation. Joe Scheideler and the two CyberSMART teachers are also planning a full-day workshop for students and their parents on this topic for late October; so as we draw closer to that workshop, I’ll feature this new curriculum in a future blog.
Also, at the Middle School, we added a course for 7th graders called “The Science of Healthy Eating,” to cover everything from food preparation safety (cross contamination, proper temperatures, and properly holding a paring knife) to balancing your food group choices to preparing your own healthy snack. Look for new curriculum in the 7th and 8th grade Physical Education and Health classes, as well. In a future blog, I’ll tell you more about the 'decision-making' model that underlies all of these new Middle School courses. Curriculum
We Added Technology!
Both equipment and programs! First, a new internet technology is now simplifying and tracking our mandated Title IX training. Staff members train on-line and take an on-line test for their Title IX certification. Second, we added a new module Inform to our PowerSchool Student Information System to help us track our SRBI interventions (this is grant funded!). A great deal of very intensive training and reconfiguration went into this new product. We’re adding NetTreker, a tool for differentiating research and instruction (also, grant-funded!). And, most classrooms at every school have been equipped with LCD’s, speakers, and other enhancements such as SmartBoards, mimios, document cameras, and so on (with a lot of generous support from our PTO’s and a lot of installation work by our tech department).
Cybersmart education no vidseffective curriculum ideas 4th gradeIn addition, we added to our Virtual High School (VHS) program by training our first teacher to host American Popular Music in the VHS format. Tom Moran will conduct an on-line class of students from around the world. In return, up to 25 Canton middle and high school students can take on-line virtual classes of their choice from the VHS catalog. (If you’re interested, the school counselors at the high school and middle school can help.)

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We Went Green!
Our new janitorial supply company, ROVIC, worked with Ed Hoyt and our custodians to introduce new cleaning processes and products which are “green certified.” All of the custodial staff were trained and certified in green cleaning basics, carpet cleaning care, and hazardous materials handling. The gym floors, for example, have never looked better, and they were cleaned with ionized water, not chemicals. The same process, using hand-held ionized water cleaning, makes our white boards look like new.
CybersmartNew painting projects were completed with environmentally friendly paint. All classrooms were analyzed for efficiencies, and teachers are sacrificing the convenience of small appliances, such as coffee makers and microwaves, in their classrooms in our “green schools” effort. In addition, between August 12th and 25th, the windows on the back wall at Cherry Brook Primary, which were rusting and contributing to significant heat loss during the winter, were replaced.
We Improved our Facilities!
CybersmartPaint crews were busy -- everywhere! – and, as I mentioned, with green-friendly paint. At CHS and CMS, the classrooms on all three floors were touched up or repainted. At CIS the hallways and stairwells were painted. At CIS and CBPS, the outside doors were scraped and painted, as well.
Concrete floors in the CHS and CMS weight room and boys locker area were tested for moisture, analyzed to be in the acceptable range, and the highest recommended flooring was installed. Bleachers in the gymnasium were also renovated and repaired, by replacing broken boards, cracked welds, and adding the handrails which made them ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act) compliant. In addition, the classroom locks and hardware in the old section of the high school building were replaced in order to meet ADA requirements (IDEA ARRA grant-funded).
The CBPS Courtyard, under the careful eye of Jarleth Connolly’s Lawn Tailors, has made a radical transformation into two teaching stations. There is still work to be done, but the 'science center' dream is being realized as each day passes.
This report touches on some of the key efforts and changes that mean the most to us. We did these things in addition to cleaning every classroom, processing hundreds of purchase orders and inventoring truckloads of supplies, registering a slew of new students, printing handbooks and policies, analyzing the CMT and CAPT testing results, setting school goals and writing district and school improvement plans, preparing for our back-to-school student orientations and teacher professional development, establishing bus routes and student schedules, and so much more.
All of this work, none of which would be possible without our secretaries and custodians, led to what we hope has been a fabulous first week ... and whatwill be another successful year.