Be careful about your online reputation,
Control whats private and whats public,
Build a good strong network,
Express your expertise and develop your interests online
Know how to buy stuff online
and so on...
This is all quite sensible yes, and the article states that, in this day and age, these things should be as important a subject in school as algebra. It does however set off a somewhat doubtful whirlwind in my head... mostly centered on the thought, who are we to teach the new students ANYTHING about social matters in the digital world, in which they are natives and someone like me (born in 1980) is still an immigrant, albeit a deeply integrated one.
The boundary between public and private has been shifting rapidly since the very start of social media and naturally it will continue to do so. The norms and expectations regarding the use and the discourse of social media is also constantly shifting. My mother is baffled by the way my brother and I use and express ourselves on Facebook. I am baffled by the way my 14 year old nephew uses and expresses himself on Facebook. And in his case we are talking about the kind of digital native, who cannot remember the first time he used the Internet. Who probably never really thought of the Internet as an entity apart from himself, that was not just a natural part of his own extended nervous system. Seriously, these kids are Hybrids and Cyborgs!
I mean look at this kid. Observing this one-year old navigating a tablet and then becoming frustrated when the extended nervous system fails when dealing with a paper magazine, sends a little tremor through me, at the sheer pace in which everything is changing. And what do you really think you or I will be able to teach this soon-to-be young person about navigating social media?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aXV-yaFmQNk
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