By not having web filters in schools, it can teach the students discipline to get their work done, and to know their priorities.
There are even some web filters in schools that don’t allow the students to watch videos on YouTube. For some classes you need to be able to have access to that site to watch a video. Some restrictions stay on even after school hours, even if the restrictions get turned off after school hours that still doesn’t let the students do their work during the school day. Web filters are not a good thing. If a student does not do his class work and chooses to watch non educational videos or play non educational computer games, that is solely their choice. It is up to the student to keep track of their school work. That is why web restrictions are not a good thing, they don’t let the students take responsibility for their tasks, they just get it handed to them, and that is not how the real world works. According to Greg Toppo, teaching with social media shows students how to use the platforms responsibly. By opening up the sites for recreational use the students are allowed to visit the sites just like they would be able to outside the
school. People who believe that schools should have web filters believe they should have them because it keeps the students on track. The students should learn how to be responsible on their own and not just rely on the school’s web restrictions to remind them to keep them on track. Some also believe that social media should not be allowed during school hours. By blocking all the social medias, YouTube, and other believed non educational sites it doesn’t give the students any freedom. In fact, every site is educational whether it teaches the students a new lesson in school or in life, it’s educational.
Work Cited
Schulten, K. (2011, September 27). Are the Web Filters at Your School Too Restrictive? Retrieved May 04, 2017, from https://learning.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/09/27/are-the-web-filters-at-your-school-too-restrictive/
Greg, T., & USA, T. (n.d). Web filters seen as latest threat. USA Today.