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The future of the Internet. 8 digital life skills all children need – and a plan for teaching them. A generation ago, IT and digital media were niche skills. Today, they are a core competency necessary to succeed in most careers. That’s why digital skills are an essential part of a comprehensive education framework. Without a national digital education programme, command of and access to technology will be distributed unevenly, exacerbating inequality and hindering socio-economic mobility. What’s your DQ? The challenge for educators is to move beyond thinking of IT as a tool, or “IT-enabled education platforms”. Instead, they need to think about how to nurture students’ ability and confidence to excel both online and offline in a world where digital media is ubiquitous. Like IQ or EQ – which we use to measure someone’s general and emotional intelligence – an individual’s facility and command of digital media is a competence that can be measured.

DQ can broadly be broken down into three levels: Level 1: Digital citizenship Level 2: Digital creativity Level 3: Digital entrepreneurship Share. Resources for Teaching Digital Citizenship | Tech Tidbits. As we continue to move forward into this age of explosive technology use, educators and families must find ways to teach children how to use their phones, tablets, and computers ethically, responsibly, and wisely. Our anxiety increases with every case of cyberbullying or identify theft reported on the evening news.

How do adults, many of whom struggle to keep up with each new tech innovation, teach students the skills they urgently need to use technology for good and not ill? First, we need to be proactive and educate ourselves. Help is available for educators who want to strengthen their own knowledge about Internet safety. Google has a wonderful, free, self-paced digital citizenship and safety course for educators, as part of their MOOC (Massive Open Online Course) offerings for teachers. After educators complete the modules, they are guided through security checkpoint tips to protect their own online personality and Google accounts. Entertaining and fun.

Save. Digital Citizenship: Resource Roundup. Digital Citizenship Videos. Digital Citizenship Week: 6 Resources for Educators. Digital citizenship, online safety & civility. TEACHING DIGITAL CITIZENSHIP ALL YEAR IN THE CLASSROOM - Erintegration. Skip to content Menu Teaching digital citizenship and keeping students in the classroom safe online (and off of course!)

Is a priority for teachers when using iPads, Google Apps, and other devices & websites in the classroom. While even the best laid digital citizenship plans can lay the foundation, teachers need to continue revisiting topics and guiding students all year. I’m sharing some tips and lesson ideas plus I’ve teamed up with my Tech with Us Community to bring you more must-read ideas for teaching digital citizenship linked at the end. Here are some things I advise any teacher looking to integrate technology into the classroom to consider when addressing digital citizenship: Acknowledge that students use technology outside of school Wait, don’t just yell “Duh!”

Many times when the topic of digital citizenship and safety comes up, educators will turn to outside sources that limit students access to the internet. Offer Concrete Digital Citizenship and Internet Safety Strategies Pin. An Excellent Digital Citizenship Resource from Google. June 26, 2017 Be Internet Awesome is a very good platform that teaches kids the fundamentals of digital citizenship and online safety.

This is basically a program developed in collaboration between Google and other safety platforms such as Internet Keep Safe Coalition, ConnectSafely, and Family Online Safety Institute. Be Internet Awesome provides a wide variety of digital citizenship resources for kids, teachers and educators that include lesson plans, guidelines, classroom activities, and several other downloadable materials. Be Awesome Internet also offers a number of interesting tools to use with students. For instance, Interland is a collection of four online adventure games kids can play to help them practice key elements of digital safety.

There is also a curriculum designed specifically for educators. It features the required tools and methods for teaching the fundamentals of digital safety. Source of screenshot: Be Awesome Internet poster. Infographic: Cleaning Up Digital Footprints | TeachHUBInfographic: Cleaning Up Digital Footprints. 6 Healthy Tech Habits Any Parent Can Pass On to Their Kids. When we talk about digital citizenship, we’re talking about a way of learning and living responsibly in an online world that stretches across communities both educational and domestic. Healthy tech habits can begin anytime as it’s never too late to begin practicing them. As Carl Hooker affirms in the ISTE article 6 Ways Parents Can Foster Good Technology Habits, a great place for such practices to begin is in the home.

Carl Hooker is the director of innovation and digital learning at Eanes ISD in Austin, Texas and the author of ISTE’s Mobile Learning Mindset series. He is well aware of the influence of social media in the lives of our digital kids, as well as the disconnect it can often give rise to between kids and their parents: “With technology, we feel like we are in the dark and sometimes choose to turn a blind eye to the interactions of our kids online. But just like driving a car or eating a healthy diet, we need to be there to coach and guide our kids through this world.” 5 Things Every Digital Citizen Should Know #digcit. Today Alice Chen @wondertechedu teaches us about digital citizenship.

She discusses five things every digital citizen should know. For each digital citizenship item, she gives classroom examples. Several important topics arise including how to talk to your students about their positive online presence and online professionalism. Listen Now Listen on iTunes Subscribe to the show by clicking your favorite network button below In today’s show, Alice and I talk about 5 things every digital citizen should know including: Three basic internet safety issuesThe need for students to have a positive online identityHelping students interact online using the language of success – academic language. I hope you enjoy this episode with Alice! Selected Links from this Episode See the transcript of this episode with Alice Chen Full Bio Alice Chen Alice Chen is a teacher and technology coach in Southern California.

How Important Are Students' Digital Footprints? Melissa Davis , Melissa Davis, CEO & Co-Founder of GoEnnounce.com Posted 09/22/2014 8:06AM | Last Commented 09/30/2014 6:34AM In an age where everything can be “Googled” and online privacy no longer exists, students have a whole new reputation at stake—their digital reputation, or their digital footprint.

A digital footprintis any online information about a person that can be searched, shared, and seen by a large, invisible audience. According to Educator’s Technology, “Managing one’s digital identity is a skill, so to speak, that we need to learn and teach our kids and students about. In a world digitally focused, the boundaries between the real and virtual are blurred.” Students may not understand the implications of what is shared via social media, and parents and teachers need to be cognizant and start teaching students about the effects and how to manage their own digital footprints. So how serious is this, really? Here are five steps to get started. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 10 Digital Citizenship Resources | K-12 Blueprint. 18 Cartoon Videos About Cyber Safety for Students. A Cute Video About Email Etiquette for Students - Best of 2016.

A Cute Video About Email Etiquette for Students. 8 digital life skills all children need – and a plan for teaching them. A Getting Started Guide to Digital Citizenship Education. A one time assembly about digital citizenship is not enough. So, Susan Bearden believes digital citizenship should be reinforced daily with kids. In light of how much work we have to do in schools, this whole-school approach brings out so many questions! How do you bring everyone together to understand digital citizenship? What is the role of schools, parents, and faculty?

In today’s show, digital citizenship expert, Susan Bearden tackles these questions and more. Moreover, she helps us figure out where to start if we’re not already doing this in our school today. Today’s Sponsor: NetSmartz Netsmartz is a free online training program from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. It is online. Check out free NetSmartz training Show Notes: What are the most common mistakes schools make about digital citizenship? Susan M.