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Student Internet
Safety and Technology Responsible Use Agreement
A.
Educational Purpose
1. Internet access has been established for a limited
educational purpose. The
term "educational purpose" includes classroom
activities, continuing education, professional or career
development, and high-quality, educationally enriching personal
research.
2. The Internet has not been established as a public access
service or a public forum. The school system has the right to
monitor and place reasonable restrictions on the material students
access or post through the Internet.
Students are also expected to follow the rules set forth in
this policy, the student disciplinary code, and the law in their
use of the system Internet system.
3. Students may not use the Internet for commercial
purposes. This means
they may not offer or provide products or services through the
Internet.
B. Access to
Materials
1. The Internet may be used to access materials under the
following conditions:
a.
Internet access is appropriately
monitored. Students receive instruction, appropriate
to their age, regarding strategies to avoid the inadvertent access
of inappropriate material and what to do if they accidentally
access such material.
b.
Prohibited
material may not be accessed by the students at any time for any
purpose. In accord with the Children's Internet Protection Act,
the Carteret County Public School System designates the following
types as prohibited materials: Obscene materials, child
pornography, material that appeals to an unhealthy interest in, or
depicts or describes in a patently offensive way, violence,
nudity, sex, death, or bodily functions, material that has been
designated as for "adults" only, and material that
promotes or advocates illegal activities.
c.
Other
materials not specifically named above will be deemed appropriate
or inappropriate on a case-by-case basis.
Decisions will be based upon age of student and relevance
of content to curriculum.
2. If students mistakenly access inappropriate information,
they should immediately disclose this access to a teacher or
supervising adult. This
protects them against a claim that they have intentionally
violated this policy.
3.
The school system has installed a Technology Protection Measure to
protect against access to inappropriate material. The
determination of whether material is appropriate or inappropriate
is based on the content of the material and the intended use of
the material, not on the protective actions of the Technology
Protection Measure. If students think that the Technology
Protection Measure has prevented them from accessing appropriate
material, they may request that the material be reviewed and, if
appropriate, unblocked.
C. Privacy and
Communication Safety Requirements
Personal
contact information includes name together with other information
that would reveal location and identity, including, but not
limited to, parent's name, home address or location, work address
or location, or phone number.
1. Elementary or middle school students are not to disclose
full name or any other personal contact information for any
purpose.
2. High school students are not to disclose personal contact
information, except to education institutions for educational
purposes, companies or other entities for career development
purposes, or with specific approval from school system employees.
3. Students are not to disclose names, personal contact
information, or any other private or personal information about
other students under any circumstances. Students are not to
forward a message that was sent to them privately without
permission of the person who sent them the message.
4. Students must not agree to meet someone whom they have
met online without parent's approval and participation.
5. Students must promptly disclose to a teacher or other
school system employee any message they receive that is
inappropriate or makes them feel uncomfortable. They should not
delete such messages until instructed to do so by a school system
employee.
D. Illegal,
Unauthorized, and Inappropriate Uses and Activities
1. Illegal Activities
a. Students may not attempt to gain unauthorized access to
the local area or wide area networked computer system or beyond
their authorized access. This
includes attempting to log in through another person's account or
accessing another person's files.
b. Students may not make deliberate attempts to disrupt any
part of the computer system or destroy data by spreading computer
viruses or by any other means.
c. Students may not use the Internet to engage in any
other illegal act.
2. Inappropriate
Language
Restrictions
against inappropriate language apply to all speech communicated
through the Internet , including but not limited to public
messages, private messages, and material posted on web pages.
a. Students may not use obscene, profane, lewd, vulgar,
rude, inflammatory, threatening, or disrespectful language.
b. Students may not post information that could cause damage
or a danger of disruption.
c. Students may not engage in personal attacks, including
prejudicial or discriminatory attacks.
d. Students may not harass another person. Harassment is
persistently acting in a manner that distresses or annoys another
person. If students are told by a person to stop sending them
messages, they must stop.
e. Students may not knowingly or recklessly post false or
defamatory information about a person or organization.
3. Plagiarism and
Copyright Infringement
a. Students may not plagiarize works that they find on the
Internet. (Plagiarism is taking the ideas or writings of others
and presenting them as if they were original.)
b. Students must respect the rights of copyright
owners in the use of materials found on, disseminated through, or
posted to the Internet. Copyright infringement occurs when
students inappropriately reproduce a work that is protected by a
copyright. Copyright law can be very confusing. If students have
questions, they should ask a teacher.
E. System
Security and Resource Limits
1. System Security
a. Students are responsible for their individual account and
should take all reasonable precautions to prevent others from
being able to use their account.
Under no conditions should students provide their password
to another person.
b. Students must immediately notify a teacher or the system
administrator if they have identified a possible security problem.
Students who go looking for security problems may be
construed as illegally attempting to gain access.
c. Students are to avoid the inadvertent or
intentional spread of computer viruses by following the school
system’s virus protection procedures.
2. Resource Limits
a. Students may use the Internet only for educational
and career development activities and limited, high-quality,
personal research.
b. Students may not download files unless authorized by a
school system employee.
c. Students may not misuse system, school, or personal
distribution lists or discussion groups for sending irrelevant,
non-educational messages.
d. Students must check their e-mail frequently and delete
unwanted messages promptly.
e. Students may subscribe only to approved high
quality discussion groups that are relevant to education or career
development.
f. Excessive use of the Internet may raise a
reasonable suspicion that students are using the system in
violation of policy and regulations.
F. Rights
and Expectations
1. Free Speech
The right to free speech and access to information
applies to the use of the Internet. The school system may restrict
access to materials for valid educational reasons, but may not
restrict access to information and ideas based on viewpoint
discrimination. The school system Internet service is considered a
limited public forum. The school system may restrict student
speech for valid educational reasons, but will not restrict speech
on the basis of a disagreement with the opinions being expressed.
2. Copyright
Students own the copyright to works that are created
in school or for a class assignment.
If the work is created jointly, each student will have
joint ownership of the copyright. Students and their
parent/guardian must agree to post student work on the school web
site. Published work
should be accompanied by a copyright notice.
3. Privacy
a. Students should expect only limited privacy in the
contents of personal files on the school system server and records
of online activity. Student use of the Internet will be supervised
and monitored. The school system's monitoring of Internet usage
may reveal activities students engage in using the Internet.
b. Routine maintenance and monitoring may lead to discovery
that students have violated this policy, the student disciplinary
code, or the law. Individual
searches will be conducted if there is reasonable suspicion that
students have violated this policy, the student disciplinary code,
or the law. The investigation will be reasonable and related to the
suspected violation.
c. Parents have the right to request to see the contents of
their student’s personal data and e-mail files by submitting a
written request.
4. Due Process
a.
The school system will cooperate fully with local, state,
or federal officials in any investigation concerning
or relating to any illegal activities conducted through the
school system Internet service.
- In
the event there is a claim that a student has violated this
policy or student disciplinary code in the use of the
Internet, the student will be notified and given the
opportunity to be heard in the manner set forth in the student
disciplinary code.
- If
the violation also involves a violation of other provisions of
the student disciplinary code, it will be handled in a manner
described in the code. Additional
restrictions may be placed on the use of the Internet.
G. Limitation of
Liability
The school system will not guarantee that the
functions or services provided through the school system Internet
service will be without error. The school system will not be
responsible for any damage students may suffer, including but not
limited to, loss of data, interruptions of service, or exposure to
inappropriate material or people. The school system is not
responsible for the accuracy or quality of the information
obtained through the Internet. The school system will not be
responsible for financial obligations arising through the
unauthorized use of the Internet. Parents can be held financially
responsible for any harm that may result from intentional misuse
of the Internet and/or school technology systems. Students may
only use the Internet if their parents have signed a disclaimer of
claims for damages against the school system.
Internet Safety and Technology Responsible
Use Policy (Print Versions):
Student Policy
Elementary/Middle Student Account Agreement
High School Student Account Agreement
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