Posts Tagged ‘social networks’

What the F**k is Social Media?!

August 18th, 2008 by mas | Comments | Filed in Innovation & Technology

I’m working on our new website at the moment and playing around with Slideshare to maybe embed some of our stuff on the new site.

While playing I found the slideshow below and thought it had some relevance - not only to anyone confused by ’social media’, ’social networks’, ’sns’, ‘web 2.0′ and so on, but also relevance in relation to the ‘get on board message’ that it really has, for those involved in youth work.

Theres a lot of talk about the use of social media with young people, I tried to expand on the potential the web has beyond this for practitioners in an earlier post, this slideshow also made me think theres also an overall need for youth organisations to start seeking dialogue rather than monologue through their online presence. Perhaps this could relate back to better ‘accountability’ too - youth services provided by organisations that encourage young people (and their staff) to engage online rather than just giving out information and opening times?

View SlideShare presentation or Upload your own. (tags: socialmediamarketing marketing)

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Child Protection Online Scenarios

August 15th, 2008 by mas | Comments | Filed in Innovation & Technology, Society & Issues

In the last post I wrote about a proposal in the US to make it illegal for school teachers to have ’social networking friendships’ with students. Personally I’ll be surprised if it actually happens and much more surprised if it happened in the UK, but I think most people are in agreement that guidance for people working with young people online is needed.

In the discussions on UKYouthOnline there were suggestions to adapt the guidelines Detached Youth Workers use. This makes good sense as a starting point with obvious similarities of workers ‘reaching out’ into young peoples space.

I think though that online working policies will also need to take into account the unique nature of ‘being virtual’ - an example I gave in the comments in the last post being that its much harder to be clearer about when somebody is actually working when they’re online compared to when you see somebody in person.

An exercise we used to run with new Trainers was that we gave them a variety of scenarios and asked them how they would deal with them. We then related their answers to our Child Protection Policy - the idea being to help them understand the policy and also to understand how to cope with different situations. The twist when we did this was that all the scenarios we used were real - they had actually happened at some time during courses we run.

I was trying to think of some online scenarios that could be used in a similar way and that might help with drawing up some guidelines - so heres my efforts so far…..

Scenarios:

  • In an instant messenger conversation a 14 year old young person reveals they are planning to go out later and get drunk
  • A young person replies to a blog/forum post and includes their mobile phone number
  • The profile picture of a 16 year old female on an instant messenger shows her naked
  • A young person comments on photos they have seen on one of the youth workers social network profiles in which the youth worker “is pissed out of their face”
  • One of the young people in your ‘friends list’ appears in the news feed requesting that a photo another young person has put up is removed because it shows her underwear - the person who posted the photo refuses and the photo is highlighted on your feed
  • A young person contacts you because they are in an online conversation with another young person who is threatening to commit suicide imminently and they don’t know what to do
  • A parent complains that a youth worker has been having conversations with their child very late at night online

Some more simply dealt with than others, but all things that have actually happened! I’m sure there are more too and no doubt plenty of other people have had their own experiences. Maybe it would be good to think up some worst case scenarios and from that figure out the things that would need to be in place to protect both young people and workers?

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Appropriate Relations Online with Young People

August 13th, 2008 by mas | Comments | Filed in Innovation & Technology, Society & Issues

There were some good discussions over on UKYouthOnline about developing policies for interacting with young people online.

In particular there was a debate about whether youth workers should separate their personal social networking profiles from their ‘professional’ persona’s (and profiles) that they use to interact with young people professionally.

Well over in the US theres a proposed law to make it illegal for school teachers to have ’social networking friendships’ with children and young people. CNN has an article online including an interview with a teacher who does use a Myspace page to allow students to contact him.

The proposed law has come about following fears that ’social networking sites are breeding innapropriate behaviour between teachers and students’. In the CNN article an Education Lawyer says that having clear professional boundaries are important “You’ve got to establish it from Day One and say, ‘I’m not your buddy, I’m not your friend, I’m just your teacher.”

I wrote something similar in ‘What Makes a Good Paid Youth Worker‘ - that relationships with young people need to be on the basis of what you can professionally offer them - not just ‘friendship’. But of course social networking is all about how many ‘friends’ you have and now that services offer to show how many of your email contacts are registered with them it means that any person you’ve had email contact is likely to easily find your profile.

Of course you don’t have to accept ‘friend requests’ providing you can get over the fear of causing offence! I’m not quite sure what I think about this yet - on the one hand some good clear rigid guidelines could work fairly well, on the other hand there is a point that its similar to saying if you work in an area you can’t also be seen to socialise there.

Actually that reminds me of a situation I found myself in when I first started as a ‘Youth Development Worker’ on an estate. I also played for the local cricket club and through one of the players I became friends with somebody who invited me for a meet up in their house which happened to be on the estate where I worked. I did attend, only to discover it was his parents house and his little sister was a regular member of one of my youth clubs - she wasn’t there but I did wonder about how weird it would have been if she’d been at home while I was getting drunk with her brother and his mates in the back garden!

For youth and community work the boundaries will always be a bit more blurred than teaching but it will be interesting to follow what happens in Missouri and whether or not it has any impact over here.

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Get Together for UK Youth Online

June 17th, 2008 by mas | Comments | Filed in Innovation & Technology

If you haven’t already, get yourself over to UK Youth Online and join up! Tim Davies has set it up as a space to share ideas and info for people interested in online work and using online technology with young people.

The aim is to have a get together in London sometime in September but even if you can’t make that its worth joining in with the online discussions. I know Tim has been keen for a long time to try and create some sort of network for people interested in this stuff and the site he’s set up has already kick started some interesting ideas.

There’s also a good discussion about the 4 possible themes that Tims proposed for the get together including a discussion about Youth Work 2.0 (& 3.0! but more on that another time)

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Youth Work 2.0 - how to do it?…..

June 11th, 2008 by mas | Comments | Filed in Innovation & Technology

Tims stuck a few thoughts down over on the NYA blogs about ‘Youth Work 2.0‘ and Hilary mentions in her blog that they are looking into ideas for a ‘Virtual Connexions Centre

I’ve been thinking about the concept too but haven’t yet come up with any ideas as to how an online youth service might actually look. Its easy to see how lots of information can be stuck online and lots of ways to support young people to access that information - whats not so easy though is to think of how a ‘virtual service’ could support young peoples development through their actions ie. not just digesting information but actually motivating and supporting them to do things that are self developmental, and of course being able to record those experiences and developments and attribute them to the online service.

The challenge that really interests me is in the use of the web as a ‘positive/purposeful activity’. Years ago when I started designing training courses for young people it was a challenge to convince people about the use of leisure/recreational activities within training courses and how these could be the most effective medium for getting young people involved in community activities. Looking back now it seems relatively simple but I was thinking about how I’d approached that as a challenge and whether a similar approach could be used here.

So very quickly I drew up some challenges that an online youth service could set out to achieve: (more…)

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