Developing
Web Page Policies or Guidelines, Mary
Alice Anderson
Technology Connection, May/June 1997
Comprehensive list of questions to consider when
developing web publishing policies. Categories
include content, contributors, safeguards, ownerships,
relationships to other policies, and more.
Keeping
it Legal: Questions Arising out of Web Site Management
, Jamie McKenzie
Excellent resource for reviewing ethical and legal
issues related to developing web pages. Contains
sections devoted to copyright, fair use, intellectual
property, publishing student work.
District
or School Web Publishing Policy, David
Warlick
The who, what, where, when, and why for those
who are putting together a policy for their district.
Oregon
Public Education Network Web Policy
Addresses the roles and responsiblities for the
district, school, and classroom web sites. Student
web pages must contain the following notice, "This
is a student Web page. Opinions expresed on this
page shall not be attributed to the ESD or District."
Creating
Student Generated Websites
Presented at North Central Association in
Chicago, Illinois April 13, 1999 by Tammy Payton,
first grade teacher/school web editor and Pat
Hale, library media specialist. Contains
suggested guidelines for how to organize student
generated websites and how to address issues related
to publishing student information.
Creating
Web Pages for K-12 Schools and Libraries
Contains a section titled "Guidelines and
Policies for School Web Pages" which highlights
over 15 different K-12 web publishing policies.
Developing
Institutional WWW Policy
A PowerPoint slide show developed by Richard
Appleyard from Oregon Health Sciences University.
Policy
Schmolicy: It’s the Architecture!, Rob
Reilly
Printed in MultiMedia Schools, November/December
1999. Covers the topics of filtering, copyright,
and password protection. Also identifies 4 aspects
to consider when developing technology policies.
Designing
School Homepages
Provides
an excellent description of the various roles
that media specialist, principals, staff, and
students take when working on a web site.
Newspaper
'fair use' challenge could limit what schools
and others post on the web: LA Times and Washington
Post sue web site for copyright infringement,
eSchool
News on-line, Nov 1998
Law suit that has implications on what can be
posted on a schools web site. Los Angeles Times
and the Washington Post filed a copyright-infringement
lawsuit against the Free Republic site which reposted
stories onto their own website.
Ethics
& Law: Take a common-sense approach to posting
school information on the web, David
A. Splitt
From
eSchool News on-line in Sept 1999. Commentary
on using common sense when posting to your web
site. Highlights New Jersey school that was sued
for posting a student's photo on the district
web site without permission. (Note: I don't believe
the case ever actually made it to court. However,
I'm not sure if it was settled or dropped)
Does
Different Mean Deadly? More Fallout from School
Shooting, ACLU
Reprinted
article from Associated Press. Addresses the current
outbreaks student rage that is sometimes seen
in student webpages. |