Monday 27 January 2014

New and digital media #10

Schools monitoring on-line bullying with slang translation software
Program used at 1,400 schools, which also tracks self-harm, checks internet communications against dictionary of slang
A-level pupils use tablet computers at a school in Wales

More than a thousand British schools are monitoring pupils' online communication for bullying and self-harm using software that analyses and translates slang for teachers.
The software uses a constantly updated dictionary which includes words that most adults would not understand. These include acronyms such as "gnoc" (get naked on camera) and "dirl" (die in real life) and words such as Bio-Oil, a commercial product which can be used by children who self-harm to reduce the appearance of scarring.
The program also monitors more conventional vocabulary used in bullying such as homophobia and taunts of "terrorist" at children of Indian, Pakistani and Bangladeshi descent.
The software is part of an education package made by Impero. Jonathan Valentine, a developer, said the program had alerted teachers to potential suicides.
"We originally developed the software to deal with misbehaviour, but we decided to focus on e-safety and came up with the idea of a dictionary of certain words and phrases," he told the Times Educational Supplement.

To summarise, as majority of young people are using a lot of slang. Which teachers can't understand. Therefore Jonathan Valentine who developed the software translates slang for teachers so they understand what the pupils fully say. It's consistently updated which consists of a lot words that adults fail to understand. Such as: "gnoc" (get naked on camera). 

I believe this is very useful for the teachers as they can prevent someone from being hurt and stop violent abuse from happening. This would be a really good way to interact.

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