Syracuse City School District Acceptable Use Policy
For All Computer Technology
September 24, 1998
Mission of the Syracuse City School District
The mission of the Syracuse City School District is to ensure that all students
demonstrate mastery of defined skills and knowledge, appreciation of diversity
and development of character which will enable them to become productive,
responsible citizens who can succeed in a rapidly changing world; this is
accomplished, in partnership with our community, by transforming our educational
system to respond to the unique needs of each student through excellence in
teaching and learning.
Statement of Principle (for this Acceptable Use Policy Document)
The Syracuse City School District makes computer and internet services available
to students, staff and community users in support of the educational objectives
of the district. This equipment and these services must be used in a
responsible, efficient and legal manner in accordance with the instructional
objectives and institutional needs of the district. All other uses are
secondary.
The Policy Sub-Committee of the Technology Committee
Co-facilitators
Marty Bartholomew Technology Dept.
Michael Parker Nottingham HS
Members
Sharon Birnkrant H.W. Smith Elementary. School
Sue Dischiave Technology Dept.
Karen Dross Elementary Education
Peggy Hamilton Hughes Magnet School
Sam Neri Hughes Magnet School
Larry Page Central Technical HS
Bob Rubino Secondary Education
Mike Riposo Clary Middle School
Patty Vilello School Library System
Dale Urban Technology Dept.
David Zehner Nottingham HS
SCSD Acceptable Use Policy
We encourage students and staff to use the computers and technology available in
the Syracuse City School District. With this comes responsibility. Violations of
the following guidelines will result in a loss of access as well as other
disciplinary and/or legal action commensurate with student/employee guidelines.
This Acceptable Use Policy addresses the proper use of Technology in all
locations within the Syracuse City School District. It is directly related to
the instructional goals and/or institutional needs of the district. Any
situation not addressed within this policy must be viewed within these goals and
needs. Use of Software On District Operated Computers Users of Syracuse City
School District equipment will adhere to all copyright laws. A user MAY: make an
archive or back-up of a copyrighted program. The school must keep this copy in
storage and may only use it if the original has been damaged. write the
publishers of copyrighted programs in order to obtain permission to use the
software in a manner that would, without this permission, be a violation of the
copyright law. A user MAY NOT, without the express permission of the software
publisher or copyright owner. make multiple copies of copyrighted software (or a
locally produced adaptation or modification), even for use within a school,
school district or at home. make additional copies of software from an archive
or back-up copy. make copies of copyrighted software (or a locally produced
adaptation or modification) to be sold, leased, loaned, transmitted or even
given away to users. load a copyrighted program into several computers or a
network from the same diskette and use them simultaneously in violation of any
licensing agreement.. adapt a copyrighted program from one language to another
for which it is not commercially available or add features to a program to
better meet local needs. make multiple copies of the printed documentation that
accompanies copyrighted software.
Database Downloading:
Downloading involves the transmission of data from a remote or host computer to
the user's on-site premises storage device for later searching, manipulation or
storage. A user MAY download to the printer bibliographic citations or full text
of a database service such as CompuServe, NYSERNet, etc., as the terms of the
school's contract with the vendor specify. It is assumed that the user will
require no more than 20-30 citations, will be using a legitimate
password/subscription for invoice purposes and has local approval to order,
receive and provide payment for a full-text document or citations. use
downloaded material for individual research or teaching. A user MAY NOT (without
express written consent of the database vendor) keep archival copies of
downloaded works download a substantial taking (complete database or most of the
records). *Note that this criterion also includes a qualitative aspect. For
example, if several records were retrieved from a large database but these
records were qualitatively superior to the others, the use could also be
considered a substantial taking. make commercially available the downloaded
material.
Computer and network use/security:
The Syracuse City School District maintains this computer network in support of
its instructional goals and Institutional needs. Maintenance of this computer
network is intended to foster these instructional goals and Institutional needs,
and accordingly, permitted activities only include those activities which
promote these goals and needs (Acceptable School Activities). The district will
not tolerate any action that will compromise its integrity. Staff and students
are expected to: Keep accounts and passwords secure. Notify the appropriate
authority of any known or suspected security breach and not share this
information with other users. In addition to the prohibited activities detailed
in Sections I(B) and II(B) of this policy, the following types of activities are
not Acceptable School Activities: Using Syracuse City School District's
computers, networks or Internet services for illegal purposes, in violation of
Syracuse City School District's policies or in violation of city, state or
federal laws. Transmitting any materials that violate state or federal law.
Unauthorized access or attempted access to computers, networks, data, systems or
Internet services. Attempts to breach security for any reason. Unauthorized
monitoring of data on any network, system or computer. Interference of services
on any computer, network or services to any user. This includes, but is not
limited to, the distribution of viruses or other programs, including public
domain software, that disrupt or otherwise damage computer software, data files
or hardware. Using the School district network to access other networks without
authorization. Violating the Acceptable Use Policies of other networks that are
accessible from the Syracuse City School's network. Attempting to log on as
another user of any capacity. Harming, modifying or destroying data of other
users or networks. Intentional access to Unacceptable Material. Unacceptable
Material means any material which is not substantially related to Acceptable
School Activities, or material which contains an offensive message, an offensive
picture, obscene or harassing language or any material which transgresses the
norms of acceptable conduct in the school environment. Altering or tampering
with any computer software such as application software, operating system
software or network software. Physically harming or damaging equipment. Using
the Syracuse City School's technology for commercial purposes or for personal
gain.
The Use of Internet Services on District operated Computers:
The Syracuse City School District provides Internet/E-mail resources as a
service to students, staff and members of the community in support of the
educational objectives of the Syracuse City School District. These services must
be used in a responsible, efficient and legal manner and in accordance with the
educational objectives of the District. To use these services, individuals must
acknowledge their understanding of these guidelines by Clicking on the I accept
these guidelines choice on the SCSD/School AUP page. The use of any district
computer to access internet services implies this acceptance. It must be
understood that it is technologically possible and within SCSD rights to log
internet use. The tracking of sites viewed, times of viewing and local address
of the computer used are all possible and will be employed where appropriate.
The use of the Internet and electronic mail service for non-classroom,
non-school district activities is a privilege, not a right. Any activities which
do not qualify as Acceptable School Activities will result in the revoking of
those privileges and possibly other user disciplinary action.
World Wide Web use
The teacher will serve as a guide for students who use the World Wide Web in
schools for instructional purposes. In elementary and middle schools teachers
will prepare lists of World Wide Web sites for students to visit and the teacher
will design learning activities using those sites in support of District
objectives. When appropriate, teachers and staff members will perform searches
for students in support of the educational objectives of District curricula. In
high schools teachers will be active coaches, working closely with students as
they search and use World Wide Web resources in their course work.
Using Bibliographic tools on the World Wide Web
All staff and students must be aware of the District's acceptable use policy and
must be able to apply the policy to their own use of District equipment and
Internet computer services including World Wide Web services. Teachers, students
and other staff members will not intentionally utilize Internet connection to
access Unacceptable Material.
Publishing web pages
SCSD schools (staff and students) will be permitted to publish web pages only
for Acceptable School Activities, with the purpose and intent of supporting
instruction, research and the educational objectives of the SCSD. Staff or
student web pages may appear on the District web pages, pages on a school
Internet web server or across a school LAN on an intranet. The District has the
right to limit the size of any web site based on available space on its servers.
Students will be able to author web pages within the instructional objectives of
their course work. Student web pages will be reviewed for their content by the
student's teacher and by the Principal (or designee). There will be only one web
server in a school building. The Principal (or designee) acting in conjunction
with the Site Based Technology Committee/Team, will be responsible for editorial
content, accuracy and timeliness of school web pages. There will be a clear and
direct connection between District instructional objectives and the content of
school web pages.
E-mail Accounts
All students and staff may obtain an e-mail address on a district supported
server for purposes of meeting the instructional objectives and institutional
needs of the district.
E-mail users are expected to abide by these generally accepted rules of the
network: Be polite. Use appropriate language. Do not get abusive or use
vulgarities in your messages to others. If a student receives e-mail that causes
discomfort, for any reason, it should be discussed with an appropriate staff
member and/or a parent. Likewise, if an adult receives inappropriate e-mail, it
should be reported to the RE&T Department. Do not reveal your personal e-mail
password to other students or colleagues and definitely do not give your name,
address or phone number to unknown network users. Never agree to meet any
unknown user. Only the person to whom the account was originally assigned should
use it. All user identification information (finger information) must be
complete and have the users full first and last names and location. Home phone
numbers should NOT be included and district numbers are optional. Users should
routinely delete unused or unnecessary correspondence and attachments Do not use
the network in such a way that you would disrupt the use of the network by
others.
Users should be aware that: E-mail is not guaranteed to be private. People who
operate the system have access to e-mail. Messages relating to or in support of
illegal activities may be reported to the authorities. Unused or dormant
accounts will be purged.
Through this Acceptable Use Policy it is the intent of the Board of Education of
the Syracuse City School District to:
Enhance the educational experiences of our students and to improve their capabilities to do research and to communicate through this electronic medium.
Promote a kid-safe internet environment
Provide an efficient and secure network for the safe transfer of information among our schools,disseminate accurate information to all users as to the legal realities concerning the installation and use of all software.
Attachment A
The purpose of this attachment is to clarify situations, that may arise in the
instructional/work setting, that may involve copyright law.
A staff member should be skeptical of those who say, Go ahead and copy; nobody will ever know. The staff member will know. Illegal copying of software is theft of the software authors' and publishers' legitimate right to produce income from their efforts.
The cost of necessary multiple copies of software should be included in the budget for educational projects. Buying enough will relieve the temptation to make unauthorized copies. Staff members may discover that the school system already has several copies of the software needed; these could be gathered together for a project.
Staff members may inquire about special licenses available from software companies that allow the user to make and use multiple copies at reduced cost. It is necessary to follow the guidelines set up by the license agreement so that software publishers will be encouraged to continue to provide these licenses to schools.
Staff should be responsible for ensuring that no copies are made of software that is provided by the software publisher for preview or approval. Copying of such materials has discouraged many software companies from allowing preview or purchase on approval.
Members of computer clubs that are allowed to use school facilities should agree to adhere to the Copyright Law during meetings. An advisor or sponsor who allows these clubs to violate the law may share legal liability with the club.
Educators are role models and should discourage students from making and using copies of copyrighted software. Staff should not use illegal copies of software under any circumstances.
Staff should use reasonable care in protecting the copyrighted software owned by the school district from being copied by students. Part of the responsibility of owning software is to keep others from copying it illegally.
Staff members should not ask another staff member who is more knowledgeable about computer software to make a copy of copyrighted software. Friendship is not a good reason for breaking the law. Making copies of copyrighted software for someone else is as illegal as making them for oneself