lol...OMG!
What Every Student Needs to Know About Online Reputation Management, Digital Citizenship and Cyberbullying
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4.5 • 2 Ratings
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
The ease with which digital content can be shared online, in addition to its many benefits, has created a host of problems for today’s high school and college students. All too often, students are uploading, updating, posting and publishing without giving a second thought to who might see their content or how it might be perceived.
lol…OMG! provides a cautionary look at the many ways that today’s students are experiencing the unanticipated negative consequences of their digital decisions – from lost job opportunities and denied college and graduate school admissions to full-blown national scandals. It also examines how technology is allowing students to bully one another in new and disturbing ways, and why students are often crueler online than in-person. By using real-life case studies and offering actionable strategies and best practices, this book empowers students to clean up and maintain a positive online presence, and to become responsible digital citizens.
"Matt Ivester's book, lol...OMG!, is a must-read for every college student, every high school student and the parents of each. It is also a should-read for everyone who might want a job in todays world."
Joe Riley, Director of Human Resources, LinkedIn
"Insightful, relatable, and critically important, lol...OMG! is a must-read."
Greg Boardman, Vice Provost for Student Affairs, Stanford University
"We are at a critical point in technological history where social media is beginning to have more impact on how we are perceived than our in-person interactions. lol...OMG! could not be more timely. Every student must understand online reputation management and digital citizenship, and this is the book that will help them."
Jennifer Aaker, General Atlantic Professor of Marketing, Stanford University, and author of The Dragonfly Effect
"A much-needed introduction to the realities, risks and rewards that college students face when they construct online identities. A useful and practical guide for college administrators as well as students."
Dr. Ernest J. Wilson III, Dean, USC Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism
"This book is required reading for anyone who wishes to survive the viral lawlessness of college life."
Larry Winokur, Co-Founder, BWR Public Relations
"In this era of digital citizenship, the information employers find online can have a significant impact on your success in the hiring process. Read this book and take control of that information!"
Hayagreeva Rao, Atholl McBean Professor of Organizational Behavior and Human Resources, Stanford University
"Matt Ivester understands the challenges of this new electronic frontier and provides information that will make a difference in your life if you read this book. "
Ozzie Harris II, Senior Vice Provost for Diversity & Community, Emory University
"lol...OMG! is an important and valuable educational resource for students struggling to stay true to their own ethical principles while still keeping up with the quickly evolving digital landscape."
Robert M. Saltzman, Associate Dean, USC Gould School of Law
"Leveraging his insider experience from his now-closed website JuicyCampus.com, he offers common sense methods that all of us need to know to protect us from the malicious gossip, mean-spirited rumors and sharing of personal information which now seems epidemic on the Internet."
William F. Meehan III, Director Emeritus, McKinsey and Co., Raccoon Partners Lecturer In Management, Stanford University
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Ivester, founder of the now-defunct JuicyCampus.com, the largest college gossip Web site in the United States, writes a practical and vital primer of digital dos and don'ts, cautioning careful consideration of every online posting because of the permanent and quickly accessible nature of the Internet. He counsels students to not be "their worst enemies" by posting drunken rants, outrageous comments, or evidence of scandalous acts, as there are few real opportunities to "unsend" or erase online content. Many of the author's suggestions are on target: for example, he urges readers to consider the significant impact posts on social media sites such as Facebook and Twitter can have on job opportunities. Most important, Ivester's winning book draws attention to the perils (and pleasures) of the new digital age, where cyberbullying is unwelcome and consciously controlling your online reputation is essential.