Jump to content

Web filtering in schools

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Web filtering in schools blocks students from inappropriate and distracting content across the web, while allowing sites that are selected by school administrators. [1] Rather than simply blocking off large portions of the Internet, many schools utilize customizable web filtering systems that provide them with greater control over which sites are allowed and which are blocked. Schools will typically block social media websites, games, pornography, other distracting websites, websites that harm academic integrity, websites that bypass web filtering, etc.

By region

[edit]

United States

[edit]

The Children's Internet Protection Act (CIPA) requires that U.S. schools have appropriate measures in place to protect students from obscene or harmful online content in order to be eligible for discounts on internet access or internal connections through the Schools and Libraries Program of the Universal Service Fund, commonly known as the E-Rate program.[2] There are a number of commercially available free and paid services that allow schools to meet CIPA requirements and receive the discount.

Types

[edit]

The FCC and CIPA do not specify how the filtering needs to be done, so most schools are using a combination of DNS, browser and firewall-based filtering.

DNS filtering

[edit]

The DNS filtering happens at the domain resolution layer of the Internet and does not allow the IP address of an obscene or harmful website to be discovered. There are multiple paid products that perform such work, but many schools are leveraging free solutions to filter non-safe sites.[3]

Broad Filters

[edit]

A large reason for certain sites being blocked is the filters and categorizes that are set in place to automatically block sites. However, one problem that arises with filters is a broad category, which can cause sites with no correlation. Many filters will block any site that has even the smallest correlation with the keywords or themes present in said filter and unfortunately, that can prevent students from using and accessing legitimate sites, whether for school, or personal use.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Technology in Education", http://www.edweek.org/ew/index.html, 1 September 2011
  2. ^ "Children's Internet Protection Act", http://www.fcc.gov, 2011
  3. ^ Spaulding, Jeffrey (2018). D-FENS: DNS Filtering & Extraction Network System for Malicious Domain Names (PhD dissertation). University of Central Florida.

<https://www.fortinet.com/resources/cyberglossary/content-filtering>