Skip to main content

Home/ Literacy with ICT/ Group items tagged cyber-savvy

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Phil Taylor

A Difference: You, Your Kids, and Your Phones - 9 views

  • We have to move beyond stranger danger and scare tactics. Sharing frightening stories (often overstated) does nothing to model positive outcomes or move the conversation to discussions of how to deal with something gone wrong.
Phil Taylor

http://get.wikispaces.com/livepanelsept2012/ - 0 views

  •  
    Video archive of Wikispaces Digital Citzenship Google Hangout - also talks about Common Sense Media
Phil Taylor

Good to Know :: E-learning Examples - 6 views

  • Google’s tips for staying safe and protecting data online
Phil Taylor

Our Internet Safety Obsession Is Bad for Children | GeekDad | Wired.com - 3 views

  • Our obsession with online safety for children is excessive. It is driven by group-think and fear, generated by media and interested parties who often ignore any rigorous evidence-based approach to the issues, or even bother to explore a simple risk analysis.
  • says that the internet is simply a mirror of our society that due to its hyperconnectivity is amplified. This means our concerns about online bullying, online sexual predators and our children stumbling across inappropriate content on the world wide web are simply heightened concerns that have always existed in the world – real and virtual.
  • As bullying is more visible we are hearing more stories and reports about it in the media.
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • The vast majority of sex crimes against kids involve someone that kid trusts, and it’s overwhelmingly family members.”
  • We need to change the language to address the fact we are introducing children to online environments through a len of fear. We need: A Digital Media Literacy Day
  • A Parent-Child Internet Day
  • We need, as parents, to help our children develop the values and the resilience and the capacity to engage with the online world unassisted.
1 - 20 of 60 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page