1) Digital Literacy Promotes Higher-Order Thought Skills
Whether your state is transitioning to the Common Core Standards or an independent state standards set, the key movement is to steer instruction away from memorization and, instead, promote the acquisition of higher-order skills (analysis, cooperation, creating, etc.).
Digital literacy skills are transmutable from the tech world to real world and meet many of the basic needs required by todays learning standards. Instilling strong levels of digital literacy creates great avenues to learn and practice these higher-order skills, ranging from students working collectively via a Google Doc to developing the ability to analyze a web sources credibility (and everything in between).