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Teens, Social Media, and Privacy

Teens, Social Media, and Privacy

http://www.pewinternet.org/Reports/2013/Teens-Social-Media-And-Privacy.aspx

“The Pew Research Center’s Internet Project has just released a brand new report on Teens, Social Media and Privacy. The full report is available here: http://www.pewinternet.org/Reports/2013/Teens-Social-Media-And-Privacy.aspx and I have pasted the press release in below for your reference.

Teens are sharing more details about themselves on social media profiles, but few do so publicly; 60% of teen Facebook users keep their profiles private   

Teen social media users do not express a high level of concern about third-party access to their data;  just 9% say they are “very” concerned  

Teen Twitter use has grown significantly: 24% of online teens use Twitter, up from 16% in 2011.  

WASHINGTON – (May 21, 2013) – Teens are sharing more information about themselves on social media sites than they have in the past, but they are also taking a variety of technical and non-technical steps to manage the privacy of that information. Despite taking these privacy-protective actions, teen social media users do not express a high level of concern about third-parties (such as businesses or advertisers) accessing their data; just 9% say they are “very” concerned.

These are among the new findings from a nationally representative Pew Research Center survey of 802 youth ages 12-17 and their parents that explored technology use. Key findings include:

Teens are sharing more information about themselves on their social media profiles than they did when we last surveyed in 2006:

  • ·        91% post a photo of themselves, up from 79% in 2006.
  • ·        71% post their school name, up from 49%.
  • ·        71% post the city or town where they live, up from 61%.
  • ·        53% post their email address, up from 29%.
  • ·        20% post their cell phone number, up from 2%.

60% of teen Facebook users set their Facebook profiles to private (friends only), and most report high levels of confidence in their ability to manage their settings.

  • ·        56% of teen Facebook users say it’s “not difficult at all” to manage the privacy controls on their Facebook profile.
  • ·        33% Facebook-using teens say it’s “not too difficult.”
  • ·        8% of teen Facebook users say that managing their privacy controls is “somewhat difficult,” while less than 1% describe the process as “very difficult.”

Teens take other steps to shape their reputation, manage their networks, and mask information they don’t want others to see.

  • ·        59% have deleted or edited something that they posted in the past.
  • ·        53% have deleted comments from others on their profile or account.
  • ·        45% have removed their name from photos that have been tagged to identify them.
  • ·        31% have deleted or deactivated an entire profile or account.
  • ·        Focus group participants report that they are able to manage their privacy on social media sites, usually by deciding what content to post rather than by managing its dissemination via privacy settings.

Teen social media users do not express a high level of concern about third-party access to their data. Focus group findings suggest teens have mixed feelings about advertising practices, ranging from ignorance, indifference, to annoyance. Some teens may not realize how their personal information is being used by third parties. Others see them as necessary to provide the service or even as welcomed content about brands they like. Some teens are annoyed by ads and find them “creepy” when they are targeted and highly personalized.

“Far from being privacy indifferent, today’s teens are mindful about what they post, even if their primary focus and motivation is often their engagement with an audience of friends and family, rather than how their online behavior might be tracked by advertisers or other third parties,” said Mary Madden, Senior Researcher for the Pew Research Center’s Internet Project and co-author of the report.

While Facebook remains the most commonly used social media site, teen Twitter use has grown significantly: One in four (24%) online teens uses Twitter, up from 16% in 2011. But even as nearly eight in ten online teens have Facebook profiles, teen users report mixed feelings about it. The typical (median) teen Facebook user has 300 friends, while the typical teen Twitter user has 79 followers.  And 64% of teens with Twitter accounts say that their tweets are public, while 24% say their tweets are private.

“Our focus group findings revealed complex and often negative feelings about Facebook interactions,” said Sandra Cortesi, Director of the Youth and Media Project at the Berkman Center and a contributor to this report. “Many teens longed for some online place that was free of ‘drama,’ and complex audience management requirements. Instead, some are turning to Instagram, Twitter and Snapchat to avoid these difficult peer dynamics.”

Teens with larger Facebook networks are more frequent users of social media sites and tend to have a greater variety of people in their friend networks—such as teachers, coaches, celebrities and other non-famous people they have never met in person. They also share a wider range of information on their profile when compared with those who have a smaller number of friends on the site. Yet even as they share more information with a wider range of people, they are also more actively engaged in maintaining their online profile or persona.

Teens with more than 600 Facebook friends are more than three times as likely to also have a Twitter account when compared with those who have 150 or fewer Facebook friends (46% vs. 13%). They are six times as likely to use Instagram (12% vs. 2%).

“Teens with larger Facebook networks visit the site more often, share more information about themselves and are friends with a greater variety of people,” said Amanda Lenhart, Senior Researcher, Director of Teens and Technology at the Pew Research Center and a co-author of the report. “But these large networks are also associated with greater engagement in reputation management activities, and these youth are more likely to be spreading their social media energies across a broader portfolio of social media sites.”

The complete findings of the study are detailed in a new report called, “Teens, Social Media and Privacy” that is the result of a collaboration between the Pew Internet Project and the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University. The data are based on a nationally representative phone survey of 802 parents and their 802 teens ages 12-17, conducted between July 26 and September 30, 2012. Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish and on landline and cell phones. The margin of error for the full sample is ± 4.5 percentage points.

This report includes insights and quotes from 24 in-person focus groups conducted by the Youth and Media team at the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University beginning in February 2013. The team interviewed 156 students across the greater Boston area, Los Angeles (California), Santa Barbara (California), and Greensboro (North Carolina). Participants ranged in age from 11 to 19. The mean age of participants is 14.5. Although the research sample was not designed to constitute representative cross-sections of particular population(s), the sample includes participants from diverse ethnic, racial, and economic backgrounds.

In addition, two online focus groups of teenagers ages 12-17 were conducted by the Pew Internet Project from June 20-27, 2012 to help inform the survey design. The first focus group was with 11 middle schoolers ages 12-14, and the second group was with nine high schoolers ages 14-17. Each group was mixed gender, with some racial, socio-economic, and regional diversity. All references to these findings are referred to as “online focus groups” throughout the report.

About the Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project

Pew Research Center is a nonpartisan source of data and analysis. It does not take advocacy positions. Its Internet & American Life project produces reports that analyze the social impact of the internet – on families, communities, work and home, daily life, education, health care, and civic and political life. The Project aims to be an authoritative source on the evolution of the Internet through surveys that examine how Americans use the Internet and how their activities affect their lives.

About the Berkman Center for Internet & Society

The Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University is a research program founded to recognize, study, and engage the most difficult problems of the digital age and to share in their resolution in ways that advance the public interest. Founded in 1997, through a generous gift from Jack N. and Lillian R. Berkman, the Center is home to an ever-growing community of faculty, fellows, staff, and affiliates. Fundamental to its work is the study of the relationship between digital technologies and democratic values, including civic participation, access to knowledge, and the free flow of information. More information can be found at http://cyber.law.harvard.edu.

Media contacts

Mary Madden: mmadden@pewinternet.org and 202-419-4515

Amanda Lenhart: alenhart@pewinternet.org and 202-419-4514

Stephen

Posted on: May 21, 2013, 4:53 pm Category: Uncategorized

Teaching America: A Glimpse at the Teaching Profession

Teaching America: A Glimpse at the Teaching Profession

http://graduatedegreeprogram.net/teaching-america/

 

teaching america

An infographic by the team at Graduate Degree Program

The average day of a public school teacher doesn’t end when the bell rings and the students are gone. Class preparation, grading, bus duty, club advising, coaching and other non-instructional activities are often left out of the discussion on teacher compensation.

3.7 million: number of full-time elementary and secondary school teachers. 1

(project for Fall 2011)

3.3 million public school teachers.
0.4 million private school teachers.

7: percentage of increase in teachers between 2001 and 2011.

SALARY – Average Annual Contract Salary:2

$49,482: (before deductions, for all teachers for the school year 2005-2006, not including supplemental pay for extra duties).
By Gender3:
$50,505: male teachers
$48,998: female teachers

By Education 4:
$44,138: Bachelor’s degree or less
$52,710: Master’s degree or higher

By Region 5:
$57,936: Northeast
$41,597: Southeast
$49,082: Middle
$48,746: West

Global Stats 6:

The U.S. ranks 12th out of 37 countries in teacher salaries

Average Starting Salary – How Do Teachers Stack Up 7?

$30,377: teachers

$43,635: computer programmers

$44,668: public accounting professionals

$45,570: registered nurses

WHAT ABOUT SUMMERS OFF 8?

Most teachers spend summers:

Working second jobs
Teaching summer school
Taking classes for certification renewal/career advancement at their own expense. (Most full-time employees in the private sector receive training on company time at company expense.)

DEMOGRAPHICS (most recent data from 2006) 9:

Gender:

30: percentage of all teachers who are male

70: percentage of all teachers who are female

Age:

46: average age for all teachers

44: average age for male teachers

46: average age for female teachers

10: percentage of teachers under 30

21: percentage of teachers 30-39

27: percentage of teachers 40-49

42: percentage of teachers 50+

WORKING HOURS (most recent data from 2006) 10:

7 hours, 24 minutes: average length of the required school day for all teachers (instructional)

37 hours: average school workweek for all teachers (instructional)

Instructional Hours:

10: percentage of teachers that work less than 35 hours per week

68: percentage of teachers that work 35-40 hours per week

22: percentage of teachers that work 40+ hours per week

Working 40+ hours – Influencing Factors 11:

School system size (number of students)
22% of teachers working in large systems (25,000+ students)
19% of teachers working in medium systems (3,000 to 25,000 students)
28% of teachers working in small systems (less than 3,000 students)

Geographic Location
5% of teachers in the Northeast
17% of teachers in the Southeast
26% of teachers in the Middle
37% of teachers in the West

Non-Classroom Hours 12:

10: number of additional hours spent on instruction-related activities such as lesson preparation and paper grading, on average.

9.1: number of additional hours spent on instruction-related activities such as lesson preparation and paper grading by male teachers on average.

9.8: number of additional hours spent on instruction-related activities such as lesson preparation and paper grading by female teachers on average.

Compensated Additional Hours 13:

5.2: number of hours spent on compensated non-instructional activities (coaching, etc) per week, on average.

Non-compensated Additional Hours 14:

3.8: average number of hours spent each week on non-compensated non-instructional activities (bus duty, club advising, etc) by all teachers.

5.1: average number of hours spent each week on non-compensated non-instructional activities (bus duty, club advising, etc) by senior high school teachers.

Total Time Spent on All Teaching Duties 15:

52: mean number of hours spent weekly on all teaching duties.

54: number of hours spent weekly on all teaching duties by senior high school teachers.

6: percentage of teachers that spent 35-39 hours/ week on all teaching duties

19: percentage of teachers that spent 40-44 hours/week on all teaching duties

22: percentage of teachers that spent 45-49 hours/week on all teaching duties

19: percentage of teachers that spent 50-54 hours/ week on all teaching duties

13: percentage of teachers that spent 55-59 hours/ week on all teaching duties

20: percentage of teachers that spent 60+ hours/ week on all teaching duties

CLASS SIZE (most recent data from 2006) 16:

Non-departmentalized Elementary Schools

22: average number of students per class

Departmentalized Secondary or Elementary Schools

29: average number of students per class

Students Taught Per Day Departmentalized Secondary or Elementary Schools

87: average number of students taught per day, per teacher

Sources:

1 http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d11/

2 http://www.nea.org/home/46616.htm – Status of the American Public School Teacher, 2005-2006 – March 2010.

3 http://www.nea.org/home/46616.htm – Status of the American Public School Teacher, 2005-2006 – March 2010.

4 http://www.nea.org/home/46616.htm – Status of the American Public School Teacher, 2005-2006 – March 2010.

5 http://www.nea.org/home/46616.htm – Status of the American Public School Teacher, 2005-2006 – March 2010.

6 http://www.oecd.org/edu/eag2012.htm – Education at a Glance 2012: OECD Indicators

7 http://www.nea.org/home/12661.htm

8 http://www.nea.org/home/12661.htm

9 http://www.nea.org/home/46616.htm – Status of the American Public School Teacher, 2005-2006 – March 2010.

10 http://www.nea.org/home/46616.htm – Status of the American Public School Teacher, 2005-2006 – March 2010.

11 http://www.nea.org/home/46616.htm – Status of the American Public School Teacher, 2005-2006 – March 2010.

12 http://www.nea.org/home/46616.htm – Status of the American Public School Teacher, 2005-2006 – March 2010.

13 http://www.nea.org/home/46616.htm – Status of the American Public School Teacher, 2005-2006 – March 2010.

14 http://www.nea.org/home/46616.htm – Status of the American Public School Teacher, 2005-2006 – March 2010.

15 http://www.nea.org/home/46616.htm – Status of the American Public School Teacher, 2005-2006 – March 2010.

16 http://www.nea.org/home/46616.htm – Status of the American Public School Teacher, 2005-2006 – March 2010.

Stephen

Posted on: May 21, 2013, 7:08 am Category: Uncategorized

Flowchart: Practicing Music and Librarianship

This is about musical practice but I do think that it applies equally to the practice of librarianship.

http://ilovecharts.tumblr.com/post/48618847638/this-is-taped-to-the-office-door-of-my-schools

This is taped to the office door of my school&#8217;s band director. Creative and rather accurate, music majors will confirm.<br />
-wheremythoughtsescape

Stephen

 

Posted on: May 21, 2013, 6:52 am Category: Uncategorized

What Guests Want…at Hotels

What Guests Want…at Hotels

I spend a lot of time in hotels so this survey interests me.  Hotels.com has released the 2013 version of their Global Hotel Amenities Survey, summarized in the infographic What Guests Want.
2013 Hotels.com Amenities Survey
Stephen

 

Posted on: May 21, 2013, 6:21 am Category: Uncategorized

New BookStats Report Uses Questionable Data to Show Spectacular Growth of eBook Market Since 2008

New BookStats Report Uses Questionable Data to Show Spectacular Growth of eBook Market Since 2008

http://www.the-digital-reader.com/2013/05/15/new-bookstats-report-shows-spectacular-growth-of-ebook-market-since-2008/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+TheDigitalReader+%28The+Digital+Reader%29#.UZo4I7VJOAg

“The AAP estimates that the total US book market in 2012 was up 7% from 2011, and up 14% from 2008. The net number of units sold were also up, though not quite to the same degree.

bookstats us book trade overall

Sales of downloadable audiobooks were also up significantly over 2011, with the AAP estimating that sales had tripled since 2008. This is largely attributed to an increasing number of mobile devices like smartphones and tablets.

bookstats us book trade audiobook

And ebooks, now there is the best news. The AAP believes that the total US ebook market in 2012 (including more than just the AAP members) increased 44% over 2011, with a slightly larger increase over 2008.

bookstats us book trade ebook overall

Surprising, isn’t it? eBook sales increased largely at the expense of mass market paperbacks, with the other paper formats largely holding their own or increasing in sales.”

Stephen

Posted on: May 20, 2013, 11:50 am Category: Uncategorized

State Universities Should Move Online More Agreessively: Report Argues

State Universities Should Move Online More  Aggressively, Report Argues 

“Public universities have a long history of adapting to technological change,  but they must speed up their embrace of online education — and work together to  do so — to remain at the forefront of educating the citizens of their states  and the country, argues a new report from two Washington research groups. “State U  Online,” from the New America Foundation and Education Sector, traces the  history of public universities and of online education and suggests that major  public universities have been slower than other sectors — especially for-profit  higher education — to incorporate digital learning into their offerings. The  author, Rachel Fishman of New America, argues that the institutions are best  positioned to offer a high-quality, affordable digital education that is  “grounded in public values,” and offers a roadmap for doing so, including  creating a clearinghouse where state institutions can “collaborate to provide an  easy-to-search library of online courses and degrees,” sharing contracts for  digital platforms and online support services to meet multiple institutions’  needs, and sharing credentialing beyond state  borders.”

Read more: http://www.insidehighered.com/quicktakes/2013/04/23/state-universities-should-move-online-more-aggressively-report-argues#ixzz2RQoEnDjn Inside Higher Ed

48 Page PDF:

http://education.newamerica.net/sites/newamerica.net/files/policydocs/FINAL_FOR_RELEASE_STATE_U_ONLINE.pdf

Stephen

Posted on: May 20, 2013, 6:43 am Category: Uncategorized

Student Needs and Expectations: A CLOSER LOOK AT THE RESEARCH

Student Needs and Expectations

http://www.onlinecollege.org/2013/05/13/the-future-of-online-learning-student-needs-and-expectations/

A CLOSER LOOK AT THE RESEARCH

Teens and Technology 2013

Changing Course: Ten Years of Tracking Online Education in the United States (2012)

2012 National Online Learners Priorities Report

NMC Horizon Report: 2013 Higher Education Edition

WHO IS LEARNING ONLINE?

RECOMMENDATIONS FOR INSTRUCTORS AND ADMINISTRATORS

Stephen

 

 

Posted on: May 20, 2013, 6:41 am Category: Uncategorized

Perfect Gifts for Teacher-Librarians (Or Things You Would Buy for Yourself)

It might be year end gift time at your school.  Here’s a cool list from A Media Specialist’s Guide to the Internet:

“Perfect Gifts for Teacher-Librarians (Or Things You Would Buy for Yourself)

100 Gifts for the Bookworm- unique and some are over the top ideas
2010 Librarian Lump of Coal Guide-
2011 Librarian Lump of Coal Guide- humorous gits
2012 Librarian Lump of Coal Guide- humorous gifts
ALA Store- books, posters, clothing, gifts, incentives, downloadable art files
ALikelyStory- “literary jewelry and bookmarks for the bookish”
Demco Gifts
Gifts for Bookworms: 10 Clever Ideas for Readers and Writers
Gifts for Bookworms Who Live for Lazy Weekend Reads
Just Dewey It- necklaces, t-shirts, bookmarks, posters
Nerd Tote- carry all your books
Swiss Army Librarian- library holiday gift guide
Ten Awesome Gifts for Librarians- from Library Journal
Unique Personalized Gifts for Librarians- includes gifts for volunteers and retirees”

Stephen

Posted on: May 20, 2013, 6:40 am Category: Uncategorized

Cloud Jargon Unwound: Distinguishing Saas, IaaS and PaaS [Infographic]

Cloud Jargon Unwound: Distinguishing Saas, IaaS and PaaS [Infographic]

http://readwrite.com/2013/05/08/explained-saas-iaas-paas-infographic?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:+readwriteweb+(ReadWriteWeb)

 

Stephen

 

Posted on: May 19, 2013, 4:37 pm Category: Uncategorized

How Can I Survive a Job that Makes Me Use Outdated Technology?

Just sayin’

Maybe some of you need this advice in your libraries:

How Can I Survive a Job that Makes Me Use Outdated Technology?

http://lifehacker.com/how-can-i-survive-a-job-that-makes-me-use-outdated-tech-476852720

Make Friends with Your IT Department

Offer to Be a Beta Tester

Try Your Gear Anyway

Work from Home

Deal With It

Check it out:

http://lifehacker.com/how-can-i-survive-a-job-that-makes-me-use-outdated-tech-476852720

Stephen

Posted on: May 19, 2013, 6:33 am Category: Uncategorized