New Missouri Law Bans Teachers, Students From Being Facebook Friends
August 1, 2011 by admin
Filed under Lingerie Events
A new law in Missouri has imposed a ban on Facebook and any other social networking between students and teachers.
- Family issues
- Ethics/rights
- Politics
Missouri’s governor, Jay Nixon, signed Senate Bill 54 that will go into effect on August 28, 2011. It is part of an initiative “to more clearly define teacher-student boundaries.”
This bill, sponsored by Senator Jane Cunningham, creates the “Amy Hestir Student Protection Act.”
Its goal is to eliminate unreported sexual misconduct and improve background information for hiring schools.
Amy Hestir, the then 13-year-old who was sexually assaulted by her teacher, is the inspiration for this new bill.
Hestir testified before the Missouri House Education Committee about her ordeal that happened over two decades ago.
Like us on Facebook
She revealed the troubling details and said, “I support this bill 100% and I am not afraid to tell my story even though it brought so much shame on me for so long.”
“Senate Bill 54 is designed to prevent such sexual misconduct from happening, compelling school districts to adopt written policies between teachers and students on electronic media, social networking and other forms of communication,” wrote tech and social media site Mashable.
According to Nixa School District spokesperson, Zac Rantz, the bill has a few areas of uncertainty. KSPR News reported that not all teacher-student Facebook contact is forbidden, just direct contact.
Teachers can have a public fan page. They just are not able to “friend” a student using their own personal private profile.
Those opposing the law believe it would infringe upon teachers’ rights and make them “guilty until proven innocent.”
Share and Enjoy
YOUR SHOW: Genealogy research tips and insights from an expert
August 1, 2011 by admin
Filed under Choosing Lingerie
DENVER – We received an overwhelming number of questions about getting started with genealogy and overcoming roadblocks in family history research. YOUR SHOW took your questions to James Jeffrey, the genealogy collection specialist at the Denver Public Library.
The second largest genealogical collection west of the Mississippi lies on the fifth floor of the Central Library at Broadway and 13th Avenue in Denver. Jeffrey gave YOUR SHOW a brief tour (see video for more) of the resources awaiting researchers. Explore the collection yourself here.
Jeffrey answered questions from YOUR SHOW viewers including Joe Mierzwa, Diana Williams, Christine Clark Kingston, Linda Jean Shannon Hills, Crystal Cashion, Lyle Turner, Aline Kloppel, Kim Brooks Ballantyne, Elizabeth Rupp, Diana Gilman, Kim Kennedy, Sylvia Leybourne, Kathy Ardueser McLaughlin and others. Video of Jeffrey’s answers to each question will be posted on this page Monday, Aug. 1.
YOUR SHOW host Kyle Clark and Jeffrey discussed the purpose of genealogical research, excellent free websites for research, getting started with genealogy, mining federal archives, tracking Native American family lines, African American genealogy, researching family members who were adopted or placed in orphanages, exploring international records, the role of the LDS church in genealogy research, and how to share your research with others.
You can see YOUR SHOW every Sunday morning on 9NEWS at 8 a.m. and later on 9NEWS at 5 p.m.
There are many was for you to participate. Email us at yourshow@9news.com, or find us on Facebook (www.facebook.com/yourshow) and Twitter (www.twitter.com/yourshow).
Each week, it’s your ideas, your thoughts and your questions that lead to YOUR SHOW.
(KUSA-TV © 2011 Multimedia Holdings Corporation)
Sponsored Links
What’s this?Paid Distribution