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Ive heard that there are files on the Internet that parents would not like their children to get. How can students be kept from accessing this objectionable material?

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Ive heard that there are files on the Internet that parents would not like their children to get. How can students be kept from accessing this objectionable material?

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If your school has a direct Internet connection, and often even if it doesn’t, it is not possible to use a technical solution to prevent students from accessing objectionable material. Everyone on the network, including students, is able to download files from public electronic repositories, some of which contain materials that just about anyone would consider objectionable for school-age children. The store-and-forward scenario described in Question 5.5 is one solution to filtering the information to which students have access, but if students are allowed to use email then it is possible for someone to send them objectionable material. For this reason, it is important that schools develop clear policies to guide students’ use of the Internet and establish rules, and consequences for breaking them, that govern behavior on the Internet. Additionally, schools should consider integrating issues around technology and ethics into the curriculum [4]. Another possibility is to control the tim

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