Eighth-grade students from four Anoka-Hennepin School
District middle schools won the National FBI Safe Online Surfing (FBI-SOS)
award for schools with more than 100 participants. The eighth graders in Steven
Burrill’s computer explorations classes at Jackson, Northdale, Oak View, and Roosevelt
Middle Schools scored a composite score of 92.75 percent to win the December
2017 award.
Open to all public, private, and home schools nationwide,
the FBI-SOS initiative is a free, age-appropriate, competitive, and fun online
program that promotes cyber citizenship and teaches students in third through
eighth grades how to recognize and respond to online dangers—like Internet
predators and cyberbullying—and covers topics such as social networking and
gaming safety. Every month during the school year, the FBI recognizes the
top-scoring schools in each of its three size categories, based on the number
of students participating from each school.
For the month of December 2017, a total of 291,657 students
in 12,201 classes at 4,768 schools in 51 states and U.S. territories
participated in the FBI-SOS Program. In December, when the 267 eighth graders
at four Anoka-Hennepin middle schools posted their composite national-winning
score, a total of 96,718 students took the exam nationwide to compete for the
three awards.
FBI Minneapolis Acting Special Agent in Charge Robert C.
Bone II will present a certificate to Mr. Burrill and some of his students
during an “awards celebration” at 6:30 p.m. on Monday, March 26, 2018, at the
start of the Anoka-Hennepin School Board meeting. The board meeting is open to
the public and will be held at the Sandburg Education Center, 1902 Second
Avenue, Anoka, Minnesota.
The FBI-SOS Internet Challenge was developed with the
assistance of the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children and with
the input of teachers and schools. Anyone—young or old, in the U.S. or
worldwide—can complete the activities on the FBI-SOS website. The testing and
competition, however, are only open to students in grades 3-8 at public,
private, or home schools in the United States or its territories.
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