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Steve Ransom

InCtrl :: Cable in the Classroom - 0 views

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    Cable in the Classroom brings you a series of free, standards-based lessons that teach key digital citizenship concepts. These lessons, for students in grades 4-8, are designed to engage students through inquiry-based activities, and collaborative and creative opportunities. - 
Steve Ransom

A Visual Guide To Teaching Students Digital Citizenship Skills - Edudemic - 0 views

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    "The handy infographic below comes from Nancy White, who wrote on her site that she created the infographic when she was searching for a resource about the importance of modeling these skills for students."
Steve Ransom

analog twitter wall to build relationships and digital citizenship - 0 views

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    Great idea to help kids express themselves appropriately as they prepare to transition to the online/digital world that has few safety nets.
Steve Ransom

Los Alamitos High School Teacher Tweets - YouTube - 0 views

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    Hello, students!!! Social media is public. Nice approach, using humor to make a serious point
Steve Ransom

The Mixed Message of Digital Citizenship | Ideas and Thoughts - 0 views

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    Worth thinking about.
Steve Ransom

When kids are skilled navigators of our networked world | NetFamilyNews.org - 1 views

  • Even when we talk about “digital citizenship,” we talk more about behavior or “Netiquette” than agency, which is essential to the participation of any citizen in participatory democracy.
  • I think that, as a society, we’ve been entirely too focused on taking agency away from children, representing them more as potential victims and passive consumers than as stakeholders in their own wellbeing and that of their peers and communities and active participants in user-driven media
  • as we stop focusing on blocking media and monitoring and controlling children and start helping them develop the skills of effective navigation and participation – they will not only be safer now, while still children, they will also be safer, more effective participants in participatory media and culture all their lives, long after they’ve left home and high school.
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  • the goal is helping them develop the skills of effective participation in this connected world
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    Yes!!! "...the goal is helping them develop the skills of effective participation in this connected world..."
Steve Ransom

The Power of Educational Technology: A Design Thinking approach to Digital Citizenship - 1 views

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    A great example of keeping kids involved in the process of learning and keeping learning relevant... even with the topic of digital citizenship and more specifically, cyberbullying. By @lizbdavis
Steve Ransom

Why Teaching Digital Citizenship Doesn't Work | Looking Up - 0 views

  • Students who behave inappropriately in digital spaces misinterpret the digital space as private, when it is, of course, public. This misunderstanding leads students to believe that the regular rules of public behavior don’t apply in digital space, and so they behave in ways online that they never would in public. The fundamental error is in thinking that digital spaces are different, with different rules from the real world. They aren’t.
  • They don’t need a new set of rules, just to apply the rules they already know to their digital behavior.
  • Students don’t need more rules; they just need to apply the ones they’ve already got. The same ones they learned in kindergarten.
Steve Ransom

The Myth Of Digital Citizenship And Why We Need To Teach It Anyway | EdReach - 0 views

  • What technology has done is taken the social consequences and amplified them beyond the capacity of many of our students to comprehend.  It’s taken what historically has been pretty low price tag infractions and inflated them at a rate many of us are unprepared to deal with.
Steve Ransom

Keeping Teens 'Private' on Facebook Won't Protect Them | TIME.com - 0 views

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    As teachers and parents, we must never expect that our tools exempt us from raising and teaching our children/students well. Be involved. Be informed. 
Steve Ransom

NYC Schools Social Media Guidelines - 0 views

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    These seem pretty balanced... [PDF]
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