Watch this PowerPoint slide show for parent tips!
The Internet can be a very useful tool, it can however, be a dangerous place. 4 out of 5 teens say that they were inappropriately propositioned online last year. Please remember: someone online is not always who they say they are. Please follow these guidelines and download the Online Safety Pledge.
- Never post or share your personal information online (this includes your full name, address, telephone number, school name, parents’ names, credit card number, or social security number) or your friends’ personal information.
- Never share your Internet passwords with anyone, except your parents.
- Never meet anyone face-to-face whom you only know online.
- Talk to your parents about what you do online.
- When posting on this Blog, do not post your last name. Email addresses will only be visible to myself (Mr. McDonald).
- What you post online about another person will be dealt with at school.



[...] Class Blog Guidelines | Mr. Mac’s Class [...]
[...] Math Error Class Blogging Guidelines [...]
The guidelines I’ve been reading about keeping yourself safe on the web anywhere is all really good advice. Remember that not all people have good intentions and are not always to be trusted. It is so important to keep a lot of your personal information as vague as possible to avoid giving anyone a way of approaching you improperly. All the advice in the world is useless if we don’t take heed and follow what we know is the right way to communicate with others on the blogs published. Just keep your guard up and make safety #1.
[...] Math Error Class Blogging Guidelines [...]
This is the answer to the missing dollar question: The manager refunded $5 to the $30 to make the total cost $25. The boy giving the $5 to the three men kept $2, reducing the refund back down to $27, instead of $25. There is no missing dollar.