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Digital citizenship basics

Date post: 09-May-2015
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Boiling digital citizenship down for easy digestion (7 slides + an addendum with some research background). I hope it helps educators make the case for using blogs, wikis, digital environments, virtual worlds, Google Docs, mobile phones, tablets, etc. in the classroom, knowing that this is the way to learn and practice digital citizenship together! No special curriculum needed.
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Digital Citizenship just the basics Anne Collier Co-Director ConnectSafely.org Executive Director Net Family News, Inc.
Transcript
Page 1: Digital citizenship basics

Digital Citizenshipjust the basics

Anne CollierCo-Director

ConnectSafely.orgExecutive Director

Net Family News, Inc.

Page 2: Digital citizenship basics

Six elementsof digital citizenship

• Access• Participation or “civic engagement”• Literacies: tech, media, social• Rights and responsibilities • Norms of behavior ("good citizenship”)• A sense of membership, belonging

Page 3: Digital citizenship basics

The most basic definition

“The central task of citizenship

is learning how to be good to one another.”

– A.J. Patrick Liszkiewicz

Page 4: Digital citizenship basics

Expanded definition (draft)Citizenship: the rights & responsibilities of full, positive

engagement in a participatory world

• Rights – access & participation, free speech, privacy, physical & psychological safety, safety of material and intellectual property

• Responsibilities – respect & civility -> self & others; protecting own/others’ rights & property; respectful interaction; demonstrating the blended literacy of a networked world: digital, media, social

Page 5: Digital citizenship basics

5th grade teacher writes about her students’ ‘Digital Citizenship Minute’

Digital citizenship tends to unfold…

Page 6: Digital citizenship basics

Get the ‘pool’ into school!

Page 7: Digital citizenship basics

The pillars of citizenship

learning

Photo by Julian Turner

• Infrastructure

• Practice

• Guidance

• Agency

Page 8: Digital citizenship basics

Digital learning’s progression

1. Classroom engagement

2. Civic engagement (participation)

3. Civic efficacy

Page 9: Digital citizenship basics

Students’ definitions…Developing and determining the best… •Means of communication & self-expression•Strategies for maintaining the line between personal and professional expression•Media tools for reaching one’s communication/expression goals•Ethics for online practices and expression•Ways to function in collaboration & community

…of digital literacy

Page 10: Digital citizenship basics

Our Space: Being a Responsible Citizen of the Digital World(great free curriculum from USC and Harvard)

Page 11: Digital citizenship basics

• Safety and support

• Power – as agents for the social good

• Digital, media, and social literacy

• Practice in the collaborative problem-solving their futures will demand

• Opportunities to co-create the social norms of social media & a networked world

• Preparation for success, leadership

What’s in it for students?

Page 12: Digital citizenship basics

Thank you!

Anne [email protected]

mnkochan
center text on this slide
Page 13: Digital citizenship basics

Addendum

Some background from the

research…

Page 14: Digital citizenship basics

What we now know...from the youth-risk research:Harassment & cyberbullying =

most common riskNot all youth are equally at risk A child’s psychosocial makeup & environment

are better predictors of online risk than the technology he or she uses

No single technological development can solve youth online risk

Page 15: Digital citizenship basics

What else we know …from youth-risk research:

“Youth who engage in online aggressive behavior … are more than twice as likely to report online interpersonal victimization.” – Archives of Pediatrics, 2007

Page 16: Digital citizenship basics

Perception => reality:The power of ‘social norming’

Source: Craig & Perkins, Hobart and William Smith Colleges 2008

Page 17: Digital citizenship basics

Reinforcing social norms

Source: Assessing Bullying in New Jersey Secondary Schools: Applying the Social Norms Model to Adolescent Violence: Craig, Perkins 2008

Page 18: Digital citizenship basics

“Promote digital citizenship and new media literacy in pre-K-12 education as a national priority.”

– Youth Safety on a Living Internet:Report of the Online Safety & Technology Working Group

Our report to Congress, June 2010...

Page 19: Digital citizenship basics

“ As a society, we have spent too much time focused on what media are doing to young people and not enough time asking what young people are doing with media. Rather, we need to embrace an approach based on media ethics, one that empowers young people to take greater responsibility for their own actions and holds them accountable for the choices they make as media producers and members of online communities.”

– Prof. Henry Jenkins, USC

‘With great power comes great responsibility’

Page 20: Digital citizenship basics

• It’s protective

• Fosters critical thinking

• Promotes agency, self-actualization

• Turns users into stakeholders, citizens

• Supports community well-being & goals

Why citizenship?


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