Easiest toy social network for kids

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Easiest toy social network for kids

Postby BlueNight » Thu Apr 26, 2012 5:02 am UTC

My sister had an idea for a project for her Master's class: a social network for kids, for discussion of the lessons, with the ability to post pictures.

There are so many ways this can end badly.

What she's looking for is a program that can be run on a classroom computer, to at least simulate an online social network. I had several ideas, none of which I liked:
- a wiki
- a chan
- a forum
- Twitter

First, the software would have to be easy enough for first graders to use. Second, it would have to be smart enough to flag/block/remove bad words or disclosure of personally identifiable information. Third, it would have to be predator-proof and locked to only her users.

Probably the easiest, most portable solution is a modified Tiddlywiki. However, I am completely in the dark on how it can be modified thusly, or whether one already has been. I am not a Javascript programmer, and I have never developed in that environment.

Any thoughts?
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Re: Easiest toy social network for kids

Postby gorcee » Thu Apr 26, 2012 7:03 pm UTC

BlueNight wrote:My sister had an idea for a project for her Master's class: a social network for kids, for discussion of the lessons, with the ability to post pictures.


So... a class?

Bear in mind that the term "social network" pre-dates Facebook, Myspace, Friendster, AOL, LiveJournal, etc. by quite some time. Figuring out a solution to your problem requires a fundamental examination of what we now call "social networks".

Facebook is a tool that augments existing social networks. It has grown large enough that it has spawned a new mode of social networking, but that's beyond the point. Wiki is a social networking tool that enables loosely-tied communities to organize around a single framework for a common interest. Linkedin extends the time-worn concept of exchanging business cards.

What do all these have in common? They all extend some pre-existing concept in meat-sphere social networking. So any tool that you're going to create, and expect to be effective, has to be able to extend an existing function of an existing social network.

What does a 1st grade class have in common? Pretty much a teacher, a municipality, and the fact that their parents got down and dirty within the same time period. Really, any attempt to inject some synthetic concept into the environment isn't going to take hold, because it doesn't extend something we normally do. You might have some success with kids because you can just make them use it, but then that begs the question of "is it of any value"?

So the question is, what's the easiest tool to use? The answer is "the tool that most naturally facilitates normal social interactions between kids." Is there anything easier than breaking for 20 minutes of group activity time? Honestly, for young kids who are just beginning to socialize and form actual networks, I can't imagine any non-synthetic concept that would do such a thing.
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Re: Easiest toy social network for kids

Postby Steax » Thu Apr 26, 2012 10:58 pm UTC

So she wants to create this? It sounds like a job for a full team of web developers, in particular user experience designers. There is a lot of user testing involved when creating for kids, as well as legal issues.

There exist many solutions for adults today, however, and they might be able to be simplified for kids.
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Re: Easiest toy social network for kids

Postby scarecrovv » Fri Apr 27, 2012 2:31 am UTC

gorcee wrote:What does a 1st grade class have in common? Pretty much a teacher, a municipality, and the fact that their parents got down and dirty within the same time period. Really, any attempt to inject some synthetic concept into the environment isn't going to take hold, because it doesn't extend something we normally do. You might have some success with kids because you can just make them use it, but then that begs the question of "is it of any value"?

So the question is, what's the easiest tool to use? The answer is "the tool that most naturally facilitates normal social interactions between kids." Is there anything easier than breaking for 20 minutes of group activity time? Honestly, for young kids who are just beginning to socialize and form actual networks, I can't imagine any non-synthetic concept that would do such a thing.


If they're in the same class, the obvious thing they all share is school assignments. For that there's [url=piazza.com]Piazza[/url]. I'm in a class that uses it, and it's pretty handy for students to ask questions about homework assignments or other class material, and get answers from instructors and other students. Granted, this class is for undergrads, not 3rd graders, so I'm not sure how little kids would handle the interface, but it's something to look at. Also, little kids don't have so much homework, so in most cases it would be easier for them to raise their hand in class than it would be to submit a question on Piazza.
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