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Lingro: The coolest dictionary known to hombre! Digital Literacy. Home - Cornell University Research Guides. Education Resources for Web Literacy. Digital Citizenship. Digital Literacy Lesson: Tweeting History. Subjects English --Creative writing History --U.S. history --World history Digital Literacy Grade Brief Description Students use history knowledge, critical thinking and digital literacy skills to tweet clues and guess the historical figure, period or event related to those clues.

Objectives Students will: Review and gain perspective on key historical events, periods and figures Build digital literacy skills by writing tweets describing historical events, periods and figures Use critical thinking to guess the historical events, periods and figures associated with “clue” tweets Keywords Twitter, history, tweet, digital literacy, critical thinking, creative writing, historical, figures, events, review, game, activity Materials Needed Lesson Plan This lesson makes a great review activity and can be done in either a single class period or over the course of several weeks (by setting aside a few minutes per class).

Preparation Chatzy.com is another type of instant chat tool for class discussions. Lesson. Home. Digital Literacy and Online Ethics. To students, the Internet can seem like a space where “anything goes.” People can seemingly say or post whatever they like, without any negative consequences. In the absence of face-to-face contact, young people in particular tend to lose their inhibitions and do or say things they would not in “real life.” This discussion—a perfect activity to celebrate Media Literacy Week (November 7-11)—will open youth’s eyes to the very real human and legal consequences of online behavior, highlighting ethical lessons that can be learned from the poor choices that some have made. Grade Level: 8-12 Student learning objectives Students will gain digital literacy (media literacy, information literacy) skills by considering the human and legal consequences of poor choices others have made online.

Preparation You may want to provide the text of the First Amendment to students either on paper or via electronic display. Options for student discussion or essay questions: Welcome to Professor Garfield. Digital Literacy Resources | digitalliteracy.gov. Problem-Based Learning. From Written to Digital: The New Literacy. Both the 21st-century economy and the careers needed to fuel it are changing at an unprecedented rate. Students must be prepared for nonlinear careers, pivoting to match the ever-changing work landscape. We thus need to rethink not just how we teach our students but what we teach our students. The people who were comfortable at this humanities-technology intersection helped to create the human-machine symbiosis that is at the core of this story.

In his book about the history of the digital revolution, Walter Isaacson contends that the major innovations of the digital revolution—from the first general-purpose computer to the transistor to the iPhone—were all created by individuals who understood how to synthesize the humanities with technology. Digital Literacy and 21st-Century Success In today's world, college/university graduates come into contact with a quickly evolving range of technologies and have access to a wealth of information. Find and vet information online. <? Notes. Sketchnoting. 18 Digital Tools and Strategies That Support Students' Reading and Writing. Marissa Broyles taught English and social studies to a class or sixth graders who needed extra support last year.

She experimented with many of the tools Levesque has compiled and saw how her willingness to be flexible as a teacher made her students feel supported. One girl with dyslexia could easily have been mistaken for being further behind than she really was because of how much she struggled with writing. “That was her only barrier, and it was so sad for me because she's one of the brightest students I've ever taught, but the dyslexia was really getting in her way," Broyles said. Broyles began allowing the student to use Screencastify, a Chrome extension that lets users record a video of what's happening on their screen while voicing an explanation. The student would pull up a digital copy of a book, for example, find evidence to support her claims, and explain her thinking orally. “At that point I wanted to know her thinking," Broyles said.

Voice typing could be one such strategy. NPR Choice page. Visual Mapping | Center for Teaching and Learning | Georgia Institute of Technology | Atlanta, GA. Ideaflip | Realtime brainstorming and collaboration. Create Interactive Online Presentations & free Infographic software. HTML5 Animations, download & Publish | Visme. Sketchnoting. School Technology Needs Assesment STNA. Fostering Digital Citizenship in the Classroom. Lesson 1.1. Lesson 1.1 - The Nine Strategies for Online Academic Research Objective: In this lesson, you will learn why and how students typically struggle with online research, and you will become more familiar with the nine strategies.

An explicit and manageable process helps all students conduct better online research. The strategies were designed to give general education middle school students and students with learning difficulties a step-by-step method to search for, find, evaluate, read, and use information from online sources. Each strategy is a purposeful and memorable step in the research process. Click on each icon to review each strategy’s key purpose: This strategy teaches students how to create “Google ready” search questions that will guide them to appropriate and relevant information on the Internet. The second strategy teaches students to refine and test a new question when search results seem poorly matched to their research topic. Activity 1.1 - Explore the Research Process Try It! ISTE Standards for Students | ISTE. Developing Digital Literacy Through Content Curation - Fractus Learning. With the amount of content that is shared on the Internet every minute, it’s no surprise that many people feel overwhelmed by the quantity of information out there.

This is why content curation is becoming an essential digital literacy skill for teachers and students. The act of curation requires critical and creative thinking, as decisions are made around what to keep, what to discard and how to connect and present ideas. Social bookmarking tools allow collaboration across the world to share and build collections. Thankfully, there are plenty of tools available to help us. In this article, I’ll explain firstly the different ways in which I curate, and then describe some of the different tools I use for curation. See also: Screencast Software for the classroom My Curation Methods 1. When I curate by collecting, I don’t use any organisational structure other than tagging. 2.

Organising involves sorting through the collection more purposefully. 3. Tools for Content Curation Evernote Pocket.