I ran into an interesting situation a few days ago and would love some feedback on how I might handle it in the future.
I've had one of my classes sign up with a wiki service (wikidot.com) to build a class project site. That part of it has gone fairly well and the kids have had no real trouble learning to use the wiki or posting material on it.
This wiki allows members to send private messages. Predictably, I suppose, one of my students sent another student a crude message. It wasn't intimidating or anything threatening, it was just crude and kind of ignorant.
If something like that happens in class, you can deal with it by imposing whatever sanctions might be appropriate. However, this happened outside of school time, and, technically, outside of the wiki. (You are a member of Wikidot first, and then you join a particular wiki. The crude language, being used in a private message, wasn't done as part of the school project.)
I showed the student who received the offensive message how to block the sender from sending him anything else. Yet I can't help feeling I should do something about the sender. However, his offence wasn't committed in school, but he had the opportunity to commit it because of a school project that I started him on. He would not likely have found the wiki site on his own, nor would the other student. So school created the background for the offence.
What do you think? How do you handle misbehavior in an online world?
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