Tag: social networking

  • FUSE campaign to stop bullying at it’s core

    FUSE campaign to stop bullying at it’s core

    By David O’Farrell

    FUSE  is a brand-new anti-bullying and online safety programme, developed by the anti-bullying research and resource centre in Dublin City University, with the support of social media giant, Facebook.

    FUSE was first launched in Dublin, September of this year.

    TheCity.ie spoke to Darran Heaney, project manager of FUSE, to find out where the implementation of the programme is currently at. He said: “In February 2019, we ran a pilot to test the curriculum with 20 schools. We have now offered out the FUSE programme to schools across the country. This took place in September.”

    The programme is aimed at second year students in junior cycle, their parents and school staff in post-primary schools across Ireland.

    It is also a research project, with surveys having begun with participating students, teachers and parents. The next stage of the programme is the delivery of six workshops to students by their teachers.

    “FUSE aims to empower students to be able to tackle bullying themselves”

    The workshops will involve students creating a project or intervention to tackle bullying and raise awareness of online safety in their school.

    Heaney added: “FUSE aims to empower students to be able to tackle bullying themselves, knowing that they have their teachers and parents in the background as support.

    “With online bullying now a norm, it means that children can be targeted whenever and wherever they are. Schools and parents no longer have control over what is happening, and the FUSE programme attempts to tackle these problems.”

    A recent study carried out by ABC, the national anti-bullying research and resource centre, reported that 26% of primary school children in the country said they had been bullied offline, while 13% said they had been bullied online. In secondary schools, the figures were lower but still significant, with 12% saying they had been bullied offline and 10% online.

    “Schools and parents no longer have control over what is happening, and the FUSE programme attempts to tackle these problems”

    The initiative will be carried out over a year-long period, which Heaney explained aims to stop bullying in schools. He said: “[FUSE] is delivered by teachers who are anti-bullying coordinators in each school and over the course of the year, students are empowered to tackle bullying and raise awareness of online safety in their schools.”

    ABC has provided a curriculum to support teachers and students in achieving the project goals, which include reducing levels of bullying; increased reporting of bullying incidents; raise awareness of online safety, and increase inclusiveness within schools.

    FUSE currently has a timeline of events set out on its website which will run until April 2020. Second year students involved in the FUSE programme are encouraged to make projects around tackling online bullying which will be showcased on Safer Internet Day in February 2020. These projects will then be presented to the National Anti-Bullying Centre in April 2020, with the best winning praise from the centre in recognition of students’ efforts to stop online bullying.

  • Does Instagram promote unattainable goals?

    Does Instagram promote unattainable goals?

    Since its creation back in 2010, Instagram has gone from strength to strength and has quickly become one of the most popular social networking sites, with over 800 million users worldwide.

    However, for an alarming amount of its users and mental health experts, the positivity which Instagram encourages is becoming a major issue in the lives of many young people around the world.

    There is a relentless nature to Instagram, a feeling among its users that they must project nothing short of a ‘perfect’ lifestyle. From this arises the same question that has been asked millions of times before, ‘when is it time to stop scrolling?’

    In comparison to Twitter, where a simple spelling mistake in a viral tweet earns you some nasty nicknames, Instagram actually appears to be quite a friendly platform to interact with. It is a visually led site, where trending posts will only go viral due to popularity. This is measured in likes that occur through a simple ‘double-tap’ on your screen, meaning posts go viral because of positive reactions.

    However, there is growing concern that the emphasis on promoting positivity may be harmful to both yourself and those who see your content. Facebook may make you believe its users are boring, whereas Twitter may make you believe everyone is feisty, but Instagram, in many cases, makes you believe that everyone else is happier and better off than you. Being bombarded with happy couples, expensive clothing or just simple good looks in your face every time you open the application may not have a good impact on your mental health, and recently this has been highlighted as a major issue that needs tackling.

    In 2017, the Royal Society for Public Health (RSPH), an independent charity seeking to improve the mental health of the public, produced a country-wide survey of 14 to 24 year-olds, in which they asked them to rank the ‘big five’ (Twitter, Facebook, Snapchat, Youtube, Instagram) in terms of how each one affected their sleep, and their F.O.M.O (fear of missing out).

    Instagram came last in this survey, with results showing particularly bad scoring on areas such as sleep, self-body-image and F.O.M.O. Only Snapchat came close in terms of negativity. However, many believed Snapchat provided an opportunity for ‘real-world relationships’.  Niamh McDade of the RSPH said: “On the face of it, Instagram can look very friendly. But that endless scrolling without much interaction doesn’t really lead to much of a positive impact on mental health and well-being. You also don’t really have control over what you’re seeing. And quite often you see images that claim to be showing you reality, but aren’t. That’s especially damaging to young men and women.”

    The likelihood among young men and women is that they are following their favourite celebrities or footballers, all of whom are living lavish lifestyles much different to the norm. Logging onto a feed displaying items you can’t afford will create anxiety and depression and this is just one aspect of the potentially harmful factors associated with Instagram.

    For Darragh, a 23-year-old from Dublin, the unrealistic nature of Instagram led to an unhealthy mind-set, one he says he could feel himself slipping into. “I just remember being in final year when my life revolved around studying and getting assignments done, the same sort of posts I was always seeing began to really annoy me. Seeing people going out and having a good time, or even travelling just really got to my head because I would be spending hours every day following the same routine for a year. It got to the point where I could feel I was about to get annoyed before I would even open the app but I would do it anyway, it was strange, sort of like an addiction that I hated.”

    Unfortunately for Darragh, things became worse, something he partially puts down to his use of social media, including Instagram. He said: “The whole time I kept thinking that the feeling of depression or even anger looking at any sort of post would pass as soon as final year was finished, but it just never went away, and I wasn’t able to get that thought process out of my head. I ended up going to St. Pats for their mental health programme, that’s how bad it got.”

    Instagram has always been the same platform, since its creation it has always been about self-promotion and perhaps displaying a false portrayal of how we live.

    So, what changed? Why, after several years of using social media, was it only now Darragh saw issues with it? One factor Darragh believes might have played an integral role was the introduction of ‘sponsored’ posts, a system where you come across various adverts, mainly fitness related, that will appear on your timeline or as you tap through stories.

    As well as this, a new algorithm meant popular posts based off follower numbers make it to your timeline even if you never followed them yourself. Darragh believes “I was never that active during that [final] year … sports had to be put on hold for projects and I could tell in my appearance I was gaining a bit of fat. And then I start seeing fitness posts everywhere and it just makes me that bit more conscious and it is nothing less than horrible feeling to deal with.”  

    Through Darragh’s words, I was able to understand how his daily battle with mental-health is one that is not easily won. We are constantly having adverts for the latest fitness workout or new fashionable clothing brand shoved down our throat, and it is advertising that is already impossible to avoid.

    The constant use of Instagram may leave us chasing an unrealistic lifestyle that we will never reach, leaving us with an unfulfilled feeling that won’t ever go away.

    For more information and advice on issues surrounding social media, you can visit http://www.rsph.co.uk

  • Twitter to be Wall Street’s hottest tech debut since Facebook

    Twitter to be Wall Street’s hottest tech debut since Facebook

    The online social networking and microblogging site is to flood the stock market next month when its shares will be made available on Wall Street.

    The popular website, launched in 2006, has an estimated net value of between $12 billion and $15 billion.

    Twitter is set to go public in November and is proposing to list under the trading symbol TWTR.

    But what is the significance of this event?

    Well, Twitter’s imminent release of shares to the public will be celebrated as the biggest coming-out party since Facebook and Wall Street’s largest exchanges are battling it out to host it.

    The microblogging site is expected to go public on November 15
    The microblogging site is expected to go public on November 15

    The company is believed to make its shares public before the American holiday Thanksgiving, in late November.

    Overseeing Twitter’s trading and listing the firm’s shares translates to additional revenue at a time when the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq Stock Exchange are caught in a downward spiral and struggling to keep up with changes in trading technologies.

    Massive prestige and added investment will be undoubtedly awarded to the one who manages to host the biggest tech debut of the year, and also gives the winner an edge in reeling in other IPOs (Initial Public Offering), especially in the coveted realm of social media.

    The website’s founding investor Evan Williams is estimated to net more than $1 billion from the floatation on Wall Street.

    Williams used his profits from selling a previous business to Google to take an early and considerably risky gamble on Twitter in its early stages.