JUDY WOODRUFF: But first: Schools are paying
a lot more attention to what students post
online, and that can have severe consequences
for students and schools.
Harvard University withdrew the admittance
of at least 10 incoming freshmen who had reportedly
posted violent, racist and sexually explicit
content in a private Facebook group.
High schools are cracking down, too, with
some hiring outside companies to police social
media posts.
But monitoring online behavior is difficult,
and civil rights groups are watching.
Special correspondent Lisa Stark with our
partner Education Week visited a school district
in Arizona.
LISA STARK: It's just before summer break
at Dysart High School in Surprise, Arizona,
outside Phoenix.
Students are eating lunch, signing yearbooks,
and they're immersed in social media.
Facebook, Twitter, Snapchat, Instagram, YouTube.
More than 90 percent of teens say they go
online every day, and nearly a quarter are
online almost constantly.
Let me ask you, first of all, do you all have
phones?
STUDENT: Yes.
STUDENT: Yes, we do.
LISA STARK: Do you ever not have a phone with
you?
STUDENT: No.
STUDENT: It's always on.
LISA STARK: We sat down with four Dysart students
to talk about how they use social media.
Snapchat, I post every single day, like, every
day, all day.
STUDENT: I always like post my thoughts, certain
way I'm feeling.
Depends on how I'm feeling that day.
STUDENT: When I'm done with all my work, and
if I don't have any work from other classes,
I just go on my phone and see what's going
on.
STUDENT: I don't really care who sees it.
Like, I'm just posting it because I think
it's public.
Like, I'm open about it.
LISA STARK: The problem for schools, what
happens on social media doesn't always stay
on social media.
STUDENT: I see a lot of bullying on Facebook
that it transfers to the school.
And then, like, at the beginning of this year,
this girl got into an altercation on Facebook,
and she ended up fighting the girl at school.
AMY HARTJEN, Principal, Dysart High School:
When something's posted on social media and
it's being talked about on campus and it disrupts
learning, that's when we have to step in and
decide if there's something that we need to
react to.
LISA STARK: Nationwide, a growing number of
districts are watching what's posted online
for anything that might impact their schools.
Principal Amy Hartjen says the number one
concern is safety.
What's like, OK, we have to get involved here?
Bullying, would that be a red line?
AMY HARTJEN: Absolutely, threats, intimidations.
LISA STARK: What if someone posts something
that is offensive language, racist, sexist?
AMY HARTJEN: Absolutely.
LISA STARK: Really?
And why would that be a red line?
AMY HARTJEN: Because that is just -- it's
against the campus culture.
LISA STARK: Students threatening to harm others
or themselves sometimes telegraph that on
social media, and districts have been sued
for not paying attention to online posts.
These days, the schoolyard has new boundaries.
ZACHERY FOUNTAIN, Dysart District Communications
Chief: The information space is just as important
as the physical space anymore, because it
has that ability to snowball at a really rapid
pace.
LISA STARK: Zachery Fountain is the Dysart
District Communications Chief, and point man
on social media.
He trains staff on how to document troublesome
posts.
ZACHERY FOUNTAIN: That's teaching them things
like asking for a screen shot of what has
happened, understanding that a message could
disappear in five seconds, as soon as it's
brought to their attention by a student.
LISA STARK: Nationwide, both public and private
schools keep tabs on social media in a variety
of ways: hiring firms to actively monitor
students' accounts, encouraging students to
report anything worrisome, friending students
to gain access to posts that may not be public,
and through simple alerts every time the district
and its schools are mentioned in any type
of media.
There's anecdotal evidence, but no hard data,
to show that early identification of troubling
social media posts can help schools head off
problems.
School officials here insist they are most
concerned about safety.
They're not trying to pry into students' lives.
But civil rights and privacy groups say it
can be a slippery slope and that some districts
have gone too far, that they have violated
students' constitutional rights.
Students have been disciplined for liking
other posts, for private online chats that
others made public, for forwarding racist
posts, even in order to denounce them.
CHAD MARLOW, American Civil Liberties Union:
Schools need to think about, how do we take
on these issues in an appropriate way that
doesn't have kind of the collateral damage
effect of destroying students' privacy and
free speech rights?
LISA STARK: Chad Marlow is with the American
Civil Liberties Union.
He says, first and foremost, school shouldn't
have open-ended access to students' social
media accounts.
You're saying no fishing expeditions?
CHAD MARLOW: No fishing expeditions.
And the way to do that is by not allowing
passwords to be turned over, what we call
shoulder surfing.
Log onto your account, and the teacher will
stand over the student's shoulder and say,
scroll, scroll, scroll.
LISA STARK: Are you asking students for passwords?
WENDY KLARKOWSKI, School Resource Officer:
No.
LISA STARK: Or log-in information or anything?
WENDY KLARKOWSKI: No.
LISA STARK: School resource officer Wendy
Klarkowski is assigned to Shadow Ridge High
School in the Dysart district.
Her morning routine includes searching for
school-related posts on social media.
She's uncovered criminal activity.
WENDY KLARKOWSKI: A young man had decided
to bring some marijuana-laced brownies to
school, and he advertised them on Twitter
and, meet me in the cafeteria.
We got him with all the brownies still on
him.
LISA STARK: And possible campus disruptions.
WENDY KLARKOWSKI: Some kids were going to
protest something they thought was unfair,
and it was all over Twitter, so we were able
to get the kids that were leading it, actually,
the night before, so that they put an end
to that, so it didn't disrupt the campus.
LISA STARK: But why isn't that their free
speech right to protest something they're
not happy about?
WENDY KLARKOWSKI: It is their right to protest,
but it is not their right to disturb an educational
institution.
LISA STARK: The ACLU's Marlow worries about
districts stifling free speech.
CHAD MARLOW: It is very important to draw
the line between punishing an action that
occurs on social media vs. thoughts that are
expressed on social media.
Once you start policing and punishing thoughts,
you are into very, very dangerous territory.
LISA STARK: Two of the Dysart students we
spoke with say they tread more carefully online
after each posted a disparaging remark about
one of their teachers.
STUDENT: I made a reference to one of my teachers
last year on Facebook, and I almost got a
referral for it, for what I said about her.
And then me and the teacher ended up talking,
and now she's my favorite teacher ever.
HADIN KHAN, Student: It was funny at first.
Then I was like, OK, I need to take some precautions
for next time, when I'm angry about something,
not mention names or anything.
I could say English teacher, as opposed to
saying their name.
LISA STARK: So, you are censoring yourself
in a way, right?
HADIN KHAN: Yes, kind of.
Yes.
LISA STARK: How do you feel about having to
do that?
HADIN KHAN: I don't really have a problem
with it, because it's not that serious of
an issue.
LISA STARK: Superintendent Gail Pletnick insists
the district is careful not to violate free
speech or privacy rights.
GAIL PLETNICK, Superintendent, Dysart Unified
School District: We're not crossing that line.
We're not monitoring people 24/7.
We're not the social media police.
But we are concerned about anything that we
feel will be harmful to our students.
LISA STARK: Pletnick says technology changes
so quickly that schools can find themselves
operating in a gray area.
GAIL PLETNICK: Those laws, those rules, those
guidelines that we're going to have to use
are being developed.
So, we're really not only flying this plane
while we build it, while it's being designed.
LISA STARK: It can be a rough ride, so Dysart
and other districts are increasingly starting
to teach digital citizenship, the responsible
use of technology, to impress upon students
to think before they click.
STUDENT: I like that.
That's cute.
LISA STARK: For the "PBS NewsHour" and Education
Week, I'm Lisa Stark in Surprise, Arizona.
