Thursday, April 28, 2011

Online Update Dangers

                On Wednesday, April 20th, Eastview high school was alarmed to see what a sophomore male student had posted on his Facebook wall as well as on his Twitter account. These posts carried aggressive, eerie, and almost threatening meanings that the school administration just couldn’t look passed. The updates, speculated by those close to the student, were a result of a constant struggle with hurtful words and exclusive actions made by other students.
                Facebook and Twitter have become the bullet to many destroyed careers and educations. In Eastview’s case, the student was expelled and immediately brought to a detention center until the police department and the schools administration could find the proper actions to take.
                After the incident, many students were unsure as to what the situation had resolved to. The current status of what had happened was still a mysterious combination of online rumors and speculated ideas conjured up by ignorant high school students.
 “I didn’t know what to believe,” says senior Averi Haugesag. “I wasn’t so sure whether or not being at school was safe.”
                The school was holding everything back from the students and the public until they could clearly determine the entire situation and produce a solid statement.
“There were so many versions of the story spreading around”, continues Haugesag “I had no idea what was truth and what I could forget about.”
The dangers of threatening posts can carry further than the poster had originally thought. What some see as harmless venting via the internet can be interpreted as violent idealism by others.
 It is unsure to the students if what the boy said was the beginning of yet another act of violence against a school or if his only goal was to gain some much needed attention from anyone who would listen.
Many student’s skin crawled as they opened up the haunting twitter updates that read “Forgive me, God, for what I am about to do. I am going to bring the walls of Eastview crashing down.” As well as “It’s my birthday next week and all I want is for Eastview to disappear.”
Nobody knows for certain what the students intentions were, but with the help of the internet and a few discomforting posts, the students actions were immediately halted and the proper precautions could be taken.
But there is another side to the power of Facebook and Twitter. Diego Perez, a senior at Eastview, says that he knows someone who was suspended for 3 days because she was burning a picture of a boy in the parking lot long after school had ended.
There was obvious conflict over if this should be taken as threatening or just an act of teenage drama.
The fine line between what is considered harmless and what is seen as threatening is sometimes very hard to discern.
“I think students should have the right to express themselves online,” continues Perez. “The school administration should only become involved with what we say [online] when we endanger other people.”
The schools administrative leaders could not be reached for a statement due to conflicting schedules. They just want students to keep a sharp eye on what they say online so the question ‘Should we do something about what has been said’ doesn’t even have to be asked in the first place.
Kids should watch what they post to avoid starting the conflict, because nobody has time to deal with it and no student wants to have something they said out of a temporary fit of anger or frustration stick with them the rest of their life.

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