Friday, September 23, 2011

Assembly Yesterday

Hopefully you were not only entertained by the presenter but also came away with useful information. As I sat there, I wondered if the people who are guilty of cyberbullying were able to recognize themselves. I would like for you to write your thoughts about yesterday's assembly in a comment. What are some of the tips he gave about using the Internet responsibly?

17 comments:

Anonymous said...

12066

yes, i learned that if you don't like a person you can always block them or ignoring the person on the site. Most chat sites allow you to block people in your privacy settings. I also learned what you write on your facebook or other social network sites may affect the way people see you outside of school. Weather its colleges trying to find information about you, or a job you applied for trying to gain information. What ever you post can be seen by anyone.

Anonymous said...

12103

I thought that the assembly yesterday had alot of good infomation in it as telling the underclassmen to watch what they put on the internet. Since they are the ones that are getting brought up in the whole facebook and tweeter. I think that assembly will help some people and others it wont even effect.

Anonymous said...

12132
I thought the guy was ok nut i really dont think he got the message out well enough. He went over alot of forms of bullying but they all made us laugh. But still i did laugh soo he did good.

Anonymous said...

12107 -
I thought he was a great informational guest speaker with alot of imformative details about cyberbullying.

Some tips to keep you safe on the internet is to not give out too much information about what your doing or who your with. you'll never know who is reading your posts and try not to talk to people you don't know in person.

Anonymous said...

12761

I thought the information the presenter presented to us was usueful and I also liked the way he addressed the crowd. He was layed back and you could tell he had done that before several times. He was knowledgable about his topic and presented it in a way to keep the audience's attention. He gave us tips about blocking people you do not know, being more careful in what you post in status updates, and flat out just being smart about what we put on the internet. The tip he gave about if your grandma would read it, would she be happy? That method could keep you away from posting anything you might regret later on down the road. Overall, it was a nice assembly that provided our school with essential information.

Anonymous said...

12041-
The assembly yesterday I think was very helpful. He shared some good ways to prevent people from being a bully or the victim of a bully. Some tips he gave us were to block a person who is bullying you online and to ignore someone who is bullying you in school. Being responsible on the internet is very important and you should never give out to much information about yourself. You should also never leave your profile open for everyone to view. Make it private for only friends you really know.

Anonymous said...

12108

I liked the assembly yesterday. I thought he gave us a lot of useful information and tips. He told us to check our privacy settings on fb and set them so that only our friends can see our profiles. He also suggested going through your friends list and removing people who aren't really your friends. He also reminds us to never post anything too personal and just consider what we post before we do so.

Anonymous said...

13209
My though about yesterday's assembly would be that the guy who did it had alot of information and ways to prevent cyberbullying from happining which I thought was interesting.
Some tips that he presente to us would be to set your facebook account to viewers to sertain friends and family.

Anonymous said...

12752

I thought that the assembly was pretty good, and that it was interesting. Josh did a good job of presenting the information I think, you could tell that he knew his stuff well. Some tips he gave about how to use the Internet responsibly were: blocking people on facebook that you do not know, ask yourself "what would my grandmother think if she saw this?" before you post something, also to keep your privacy settings so only your friends that you have added can see your profile and information. I thought that it was a good assembly and that Josh did a great job of presenting all of the information.

Anonymous said...

12542
at the assembaly yesterday i was listening to the speaker; josh. he gave me ideas about facebook and that we shouldn't put down exactly where we are going and that we should not post anything bad on any websites because everyone can see what we post, even on google or yahoo. so to inform people who are looking at this should listening to this and don't post any information down that you don't want out and you could get hurt if you post something where you are going if you are alone......

Anonymous said...

15243

I thought that the assenmbly was a good reminder that the internet isn't completely safe, and on social sites like facebook you have to be careful about what you post for people to see. One tip he gave us was to only add people you know, and not someone you have never met face to face. but overall Josh did a great job in explaining how your actions online could cause yourself trouble, or others trouble.

Anonymous said...

12532-
I think the assembly yesterday was great. The presenter was not only entertaining but he also presented it in a way that wasn't lecturing us, but informing us of the problems going on so we don't end up in the situation.

Some of the tips he gave us on using the Internet responsibly are:

- Chose you're friends online wisely, if you don't want them knowing what you do daily, and everything about yourself don't add them.

- Change your privacy settings so only your friends can see all your personal information.

- If you're going to make your profile public for everyone to see, then you need to think more wisely about what you post. Don't post that you're home alone, you're phone number, where you're going to be. It just make it easier for people you don't know track you down.

- Be careful of the pictures you post, it doesn't matter if they are of you or if they are of your friends, if it's something you shouldn't be doing, you aren't of age to be doing etc. if the school system, a parent, or the law gets a hold of them, you will be in trouble.

Anonymous said...

15131:
The assembly was entertaining and helped people learn about the worse that can happen as in death and attempt to death.Cyberbulling is not something to make a joke. I hope it ,made alot of people realize how bad they can make someone feel and the things that can happen because of it. Some tips he gave us was to go home check our privicy setting , delete some people you dont know or that you are having promblems with , and watch what stuff you post on facebook. if you are being bullied go to an adult or a friend you can trust.

Anonymous said...

12765
The assembly yesterday was very entertaining. I didnt expect him to be so funny. He was informative of course but he didnt just drone on and on about cyberbullying, he grabbed our attention by telling jokes and stories. So in all I really enjoyed it and was impressed on how passionate he is about his job. Some tips Josh had were to block those on facebook who are harrassing you, think about what a post or a picture could do to you before you post it and get rid of "friends" on facebook that you've never met in person before.

Anonymous said...

-15230

i thought the guy was pretty funny, but i had thought that he focused to much on facebook being a big source on cyberbullying. When it can be different things like your cell phone. But, all and all i thought he was very funny.

Anonymous said...

12056

I'll be honest, I didn't find it all that informative and he himself seemed like a bully. His jokes were funny, though I've heard a few of them, or something close to them, from other comedians. People shouldn't be sending out personal information or saying things that could get them into trouble anyways. It's just common sense.

Anonymous said...

15101

Yes, I really enjoyed that assembly yesterday, and though that speaker did a really good job of providing us with ways to prevent cyberbullying. Some tips he gave us were to not give out a lot of information about ourselves, and how to block and mark everything private. And to make sure and never put something out there you aren't sure should even be out there, because once it is out there it's there for ever for everyone to see.