School District to Monitor Student
Blogs
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
May 23, 2006
LIBERTYVILLE, Ill. (AP) -- High school students are going to be held
accountable for what they post on blogs and on social-networking Web
sites such as MySpace.com.
The board of Community High School District 128 voted unanimously on
Monday to require that all students participating in extracurricular
activities sign a pledge agreeing that evidence of ''illegal or
inappropriate'' behavior posted on the Internet could be grounds for
disciplinary action.
The rule will take effect at the start of the next school year,
officials said.
District officials won't regularly search students' sites, but will
monitor them if they get a worrisome tip from another student, a parent
or a community member.
Mary Greenberg of Lake Bluff, who has a son at Libertyville High
School, argued the district is overstepping its bounds.
''I don't think they need to police what students are doing online,''
she said. ''That's my job.''
Associate Superintendent Prentiss Lea rebuffed that criticism.
''The concept that searching a blog site is an invasion of privacy is
almost an oxymoron,'' he said. ''It is called the World Wide Web.''
The social networking Web site MySpace.com allows its nearly 80 million
users to post pictures and personal information while communicating
with others.
District 128, in Lake County north of Chicago, has some 3,200 students,
about 80 percent of whom participate in extracurricular activities,
according to school officials.