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Julie Lindsay

Towards a radical digital citizenship in digital education - 1 views

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    Critical Studies in Education: Vol 60, No 1 In this article, we attempt to define and explore a concept of 'radical digital citizenship' and its implications for digital education. We argue that the 'digital' and its attendant technologies are constituted by on-going materialist struggles for equality and justice in the Global South and North which are erased in the dominant literature and debates in digital education. We assert the need for politically informed understandings of the digital, technology and citizenship and for a 'radical digital citizenship' in which critical social relations with technology are made visible and emancipatory technological practices for social justice are developed.
Julie Lindsay

Expert insights into education for positive digital footprint development - 1 views

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    Abstract: Children and young people are spending more time online. Face-to-face interactions with friends are being supplemented with digital communication. Australian children are particularly prolific users of the internet (Green et al, 2011). This online activity creates digital footprints. Digital footprint refers to the information and data that people generate, through purposive action or passive recording, when they go online (Thatcher, 2014). Digital footprints now play a role in people's employment and educational opportunities (Black and Johnson, 2010). In this context not having a digital footprint can be as serious as having a badly managed one. One way to address this is for schools to explicitly teach students how to develop positive digital footprints that will help, rather than hinder, them in the future.
Julie Lindsay

Home | DigCitCommit - 1 views

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    Inclusive, Informed, Engaged, Balanced, Alert - attributes of a global digital citizen. Hashtag #digcitcommit
Julie Lindsay

Confident, capable and world changing: teenagers and digital citizenship - 0 views

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    Found in Communication Research and Practice: Vol 6, No 1 Abstract: Around the world policymakers are exploring the kinds of skills and competencies that teenagers need to have to contribute to society as digital citizens. Based on the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child framework, and informed by critical analysis of discourses around digital citizenship, this paper explores the competencies already demonstrated by many adolescents and addresses the priorities identified by policymakers. It compares the top-down adult policymakers' blueprints for digital citizenship with the performances of citizenship by many young people, who mobilise digital resources to communicate with powerful others as a means of progressing their aims. Drawing upon examples of small-scale teenage activism, and linking these to some of the big questions of the age: climate change, gender equity and social justice, the paper moves beyond discussions of tech-addiction and online passivity to investigate adolescents' strategic engagement in digital spaces to achieve a more equitable future.
Julie Lindsay

Learning online: the student experience - 1 views

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    New book by George Veletsianos - free chapters available for download
katelester

Are You a Curator or a Dumper? | Cult of Pedagogy - 0 views

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    This blog post succinctly explains what happens when we 'dump' resources on colleagues rather than curate them in a useful way.
katelester

Curation for Digital Learning | BYOT Network - 1 views

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    Reasons for content curation and the process of curation
katelester

Content Curation Strategies for Digital Learning | BYOT Network - 0 views

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    This is a helpful blog post on how to plan for and implement effective content curation strategies
radcre

Resources - 0 views

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    With all lessons, but particularly citizenship, we must first help students regulate, be able to relate to them and then we can reason with them. (The three R's)
robynlb

Microsoft Educator Digital Citizenship - 3 views

This page from the NSW Department of Education has links to a free toolkit and course on digital citizenship provided by Microsoft Educator. The toolkit has free lesson plans, infographics etc.

https:__www.digitalcitizenship.nsw.edu.au_resources_microsoft-educator-digital-citizenship?fbclid=IwAR3uzXmBWGd41SgbaBVRVRB2SxbSSGxJnfvzmoS-ymWDQAJdzfmORoPCCnA digital citizenship education social media cybersafety

started by robynlb on 16 Mar 20 no follow-up yet
arcunningham

Building Your PLN – Courses & PD - 2 views

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    For ETL523.....Module 1 We were asked to find more up to date information on creating a Professional Learning Network and I located this on edublogs. 7 step course, can be completed in any order, to help build an online PLN.
katarina1234

Safe and Responsible Use of the Internet: - 0 views

  • Schools are uniquely positioned to serve as the primary vehicle through which young people can develop the knowledge, skills, and motivation to use the Internet in a safe, responsible, and effective manner.
    • katarina1234
       
      Currency - Published 2002, the internet changes rapidly, not all information may be current Reliability - fact based, many cited sources, previous studies, reports etc. Authority - Author has degrees in education and law, no sponsors on this page Purpose - To provide aid for educators for safe internet use for student, no ads on this page
    • katarina1234
       
      Currency - Published 2002, the internet changes rapidly, not all information may be current Reliability - fact based, many cited sources, previous studies, reports etc. Authority - Author has degrees in education and law, no sponsors on this page Purpose - To provide aid for educators for safe internet use for student, no ads on this page
Julie Lindsay

Digital Note Taking Strategies That Deepen Student Thinking - 3 views

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    As digital devices become more common in classrooms, teachers and students are discovering that what worked in the analog world may not be as effective in the digital one. New skills, tools and approaches are benefiting all.
Julie Lindsay

Imagine if we didn't know how to use books - notes on a digital practices framework - D... - 2 views

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    Interesting model and approach to digital literacy by Dave Cormier.
Julie Lindsay

Digital natives: where is the evidence? - 1 views

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    There are a number of labels to describe the young people currently studying at school, college and university. They include the digital natives, the net generation, the Google generation or the millenials. All of these terms are being used to highlight the significance and importance of new technologies within the lives of young people (Gibbons, 2007). For some, new technologies have been such a defining feature in the lives of younger generations that they predict a fundamental change in the way young people communicate, socialise, create and learn. They argue that this shift has profound implications for education (e.g. Prensky, 2001a; Gibbons, 2007; Rainie, 2006 and Underwood, 2007). Typically, supporters of this concept view the differences between those who are or who are not digital natives as primarily about when a person was born. This paper will critique and show new evidence against this conception of the digital native as based purely on generational differences. The paper will separate the 'doing' from the 'being', that is it will propose a number of digital activities (doing) that indicate digital nativeness and then examine which types of people (being) are most likely to demonstrate these characteristics. The paper will show that breadth of use, experience, self-efficacy and education are just as, if not more, important than age in explaining how people become digital natives.
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