WORLD WIDE WEB IN EDUCATION
Ethical Use of Resources and Information
Andreanna K. Koufou
Department of Educational Science and Early Childhood Education, University of Patras
University Campus, Patras, Greece
Dimitrios K. Tsolis
Department of Computing Engineering and Informatics, University of Patras
University Campus, Patras, Greece
Keywords: Internet, World Wide Web, Ethical use of resources and information, Use policy, Intellectual Property
Rights, Conceptual representations, Internet didactics.
Abstract: Internet is nowadays included to almost all National Curriculums of the elementary school. A comparative
study of US’ UK’s and Greek, curriculums leads to the conclusion that a complete curriculum should also
aim to student’s acquisition of the abilities to navigate and search for information and additionally to
emphasize on ethical use of resources and information, specifically referring to Intellectual Property Rights
laws and regulations. In a constructivistic knowledge framework instruction of these Internet characteristics
has to take under consideration the conceptual representations of students. The following paper presents the
conceptual representation of students of eleven years old, attending the Sixth Grade of Greek Elementary
School about World Wide Web and proposes a course based on them, in order to introduce students to the
ethical use of resources and information.
1 INTRODUCTION
World Wide Web offers an enormous range of easily
accessible information. Therefore students have to
conquest capabilities of collecting information
through the Net but also adopt principles towards a
responsible use of it, especially regarding respect to
Intellectual Property Rights laws and regulations.
Taking under consideration the above and based
on their conceptual representations about Internet a
course was designed and materialized about World
Wide Web, with the participation of eleven years old
students.
2 THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
2.1 Ethical Use
& Intellectual Property Rights
Borrowing a book from a library seems easy but as a
matter of fact, it is based on a complicated
mechanism, involving laws, publication policies and
many financial and technological parameters. This
mechanism might be in a balance and in everyday
use but this balance could be affected by the rapid
digitization of the information provided (the books).
The problem can be proved in a simple way: a
book could be borrowed by one or two people at the
same time by the same library. An electronic book
could be borrowed by anyone with a telephone line,
a computer and an Internet connection. From the
Internet user point of view this news is really good.
The library owns a book which is never exclusively
borrowed and is always available for countless
readers. In fact this library is open for twenty four
hours a day, seven days a week. On the other hand,
the news is very stressful for publishers and writers.
How many copies will be sold or published while
digital networks allow world wide access to digital
information? The publishers and writers could think
of the number of one and only copy. How many
books, movies, music pieces and copyrighted
information can be created, published and sold to the
Proceedings of CSEDU 2009
International Conference on Computer Supported Education
Copyright © INSTICC
Internet while for world wide access to readers,
listeners and viewers one digital copy is enough?
The aforementioned simple (as it seems)
problem, is describing exactly the modern digital
dilemma as Randall D. (Randal, 2001) has predicted.
World Wide Web (WWW) is a powerful mean to
publish and distribute information and the world’s
largest infrastructure for making digital copies of
this information. It is a technology with which free
and efficient access to information could grow at an
unbelievable pace, but at the same time could prove
to be a force of deepening the discrimination line
between the one who has and the one who hasn’t.
According to the House of Representatives
(1998), the Information Society Technologies are
changing the most common methods of providing
access to digital content. The information available
in digital form is increasing in an every day basis,
the Internet is connecting world-wide digital
contents and the WWW is providing an efficient
platform consisting of access services, a gate to
scientific and cultural resources, music, movies and
video archives to everyone as well as children. The
technologies which provide access to digital content
are at the same time provoking important problems
concerning the protection and management of
Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) for this digital
content. This is happening mainly because
technology is supporting efficient access to and at
the same time ease of copying copyrighted
information. As a result many legislative rules and
laws for IPR which are referring to physical objects
are almost invalid for digital objects. The specific
problem is becoming even more intense while
broadband Internet is being applied world-wide and
any Internet user has fast data transfer rates at his
disposal. Other examples which prove the size of the
problem include the free distribution of copyrighted
music and movies through the Internet, the on-line
sale of copyrighted digital images of art and culture
without permission.
Proposed solutions to the problem of Intellectual
Property Rights (IPR) protection in the internet tend
to be aggressive and lock valuable educational
content which is accessed only from private and
restricted numbers of users threatening e-inclusion
and the Internet democracy as a whole.
The only approach which deals with the issue in
the long term and sets the basis for future ethical use
of the Internet is instructional actions which raise
awareness and teach the Internet user the basics of
IPR and at the same time the need to respect the
copyright of information acquired by the Internet.
The instructional approach starts from the early
grades of the elementary school and through specific
curriculum and courses aim to “preserve honest
internet users, honest”, supporting the ethical use of
the Internet by children. The structure and rationale
of these courses are mainly based on the experience
of experts in the area and most of times do not take
into account what are the conceptual representations
of children about the Internet. This leads usually to
complex teaching activities and to non –
constructivistic courses.
The proposed by this paper approach is to study
the conceptual representations of children about the
Internet and based on these representations to
implement instructional activities towards the
construction of new knowledge and capabilities for
ethical Internet use.
2.2 Conceptual Representations
Contemporary psychological approaches of learning
and science didactics create a new, common base for
the design and the materialization of various
subjects. Nowadays the aspect that learning
procedure is not possible to be materialized if it
doesn’t take under consideration the conceptual
representations of students and the process of
knowledge construction is becoming more and more
acceptable.
Thus, learning is not a Knowledge collecting
process, is not being acquired or transferred. On the
contrary, it takes place when the student’s
exploration of the student reveals inconsistencies
between current representations and experience. In
that case, a student tends to change his/her
conceptual model not necessarily in order to replace
it by the objectively right but by the most viable one
(Von Glasersfeld, 1990). A major theme in the
theoretical framework of Bruner is that learning is
an active process in which learners construct new
ideas or concepts based upon their current/past
knowledge. The learner selects and transforms
information, constructs hypotheses, and makes
decisions, relying on a cognitive structure to do so.
Cognitive structure (i.e., schema, mental models)
provides meaning and organization to experiences
and allows the individual to "go beyond the
information given" (Bruner, 1973).
Therefore, starting point of learning is what a
person knows or ignores before teaching. Often
traditional teaching slightly effects the conceptual
representations of a student not only after a course
but even after adult age (Viennot, 1979), because of
the ignoration of conceptual representation during
teaching. It is clear that a teaching course based on
constructivism has to study the conceptual
representations of students in order to use them if
they are according to a scientific model or to
reconstruct them if they are conceptual obstacles, via
the creation of conceptual conflict learning
conditions (Ravanis, 2003).
Also the instructor should try and encourage
students to discover principles by themselves. The
instructor and student should engage in an active
dialog (i.e., socratic learning). The task of the
instructor is to translate information to be learned
into a format appropriate to the learner's current state
of understanding. Curriculum should be organized in
a spiral manner so that the student continually builds
upon what they have already learned (Bruner, 1966).
Based on the above axioms the paper in the next
sections presents a research methodology which
leads to the implementation of an innovative course
which supports the construction of new knowledge
about the ethical use of Internet.
3 METHODOLOGY
3.1 Objective
In the following sections is presented the design and
the implementation of a course about WWW in
which took part eleven years old students, attending
the last grade of Greek elementary school.
The objective was the design and implementation
of an innovative course about WWW, that would
raise the awareness of IPR, based on the study of
student’s conceptual representations.
3.2 Research
The research took place in real class conditions.
Took part six elementary school students, eleven
years old, who consisted two work groups, divided
by gender. The research initiated by the study of
conceptual representations.
In order the conceptual representations to be
emerged the researcher used personal questionnaires
and interviews (Pandelis, 1995). A questionnaire of
twenty questions, gradually more demanding was
given to every student. There were many types of
questions as open questions, semi-open, closed,
multiple choice (Javeau, 2000). After the
questionnaires was filled in, students took part in
personal interviews where answered to questions
about the answers given to the questionnaires. The
answers of the questionnaires and the interviews
were organized using the statistical software SPSS
(Evaggelopoulos, 1987). Then, a course was
designed that took under consideration these
representations.
4 RESEARCH ANALYSIS
4.1 Students’ Conceptual
Representations
In the following paragraph will be presented the
students’ answers about critical aspects of WWW
and the researcher’ s conclusions.
All students have a personal computer at home.
They don’t take computer lessons but they use their
computer in many different ways, such as navigating
in WWW in order to search for information and
games.
Figure 1: Frequency of Internet use.
Figure 2: Reasons of Internet use.
Students know about the technological means
demanded to access the Internet and that they are
able to access through it to any kind of information,
in any language. Though they ignore where
information is being stored and how to search for
them.
Also they consider that all information in WWW
come from experts, so that they are valid and
updated. Finally they totally ignore the concept of
“Intellectual Property Rights”.
Figure 3: Credibility of Internet information, Copyrights.
4.2 Setting Didactical Goals
The goals that the course set for students to achieve,
based on their conceptual representations were:
To accept and embrace WWW as a source of
information
To evaluate the credibility of the information
given from WWW
To perceive concepts as “Intellectual Property
Rights” and “Copyright protection and
management
To adopt policies result from them
5 IMPLEMENTATION
Students access pre chosen sites where is
emphasized that their content is being protected by
the laws of Intellectual Property Rights
(http://www.culture.gr - http://www.in.gr).
Is being discussed the matter of Copyright
protection and management
Teacher calls students to compare the copyright
protection of the content of a site to the
copyright protection of a bookgiven.
Then they visit a pre chosen site
(http://www.geocities.com/makedonia007/)
that publishes historical information about
Macedonia. They compare that information
with history books realizing that the two
sources are totally different.
Initiates a discussion about the credibility of a
site. Who publishes the information of a site?
Is he/she an expert? Is it a formal site or a
personal one? Is a published book more
trustworthy and under which conditions?
6 CONCLUSIONS
Raising awareness to children and at the same time
constructing new knowledge and capabilities
regarding the ethical use of the WWW is the most
sustainable approach for the future respect of the
Internet user to the IPR laws and regulations.
Research has to turn towards to this direction.
More statistical data about student’s conceptual
representations on the matter, case studies and
curriculum planning is needed.
REFERENCES
Bruner, J., “Going Beyond the Information Given”. New
York: Norton, 1973.
Bruner, J., “Towards a Theory of Instruction”. Cambridge,
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Evaggelopoulos, Sp., “Experimental Pedagogy with
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House of Representatives. “Digital Millennium Copyright
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