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digital freedom network, has the facts on freedom all around the world and is up to date with most countries. It has current events, the frontline, and freedom pages.
TRAILS is a knowledge assessment with multiple-choice questions targeting a variety of information literacy skills based on sixth and ninth grade standards.
This news site gives perfect examples in innovations of technology. It contains articles explaining new ideas conceived or at work to help understand and make things more efficient. One article tells of an idea how trapping and using light, instead of electrons, in computers can really boost computer speed and data processing.
At the website, I found information about how kids assume nothing is wrong with the internet. It talks about digital literacy and why you should know about technology. It talks about how you should be careful when on internet.
Podcast41: Digital Citizenship
posted in podcasts |
Dr. Mike Ribble recently defended his dissertation at the College of Education at Kansas State University on the topic of Digital Citizenship. In this interview with Mike, he defines digital citizenship, discusses its importance in the K-12 curriculum, and outlines digital citizenship resources he has created online and for print publication.
The Supreme Court will hear arguments over whether the government is automatically on the hook for illegally releasing private data. The feds say individuals must prove harm before claiming compensation. By Ryan Singel.
This website answers all of the questions people may have to digital literacy. It tells you about hazards, problems, and how to be computer literate. The author, Gilster, answers all questions from his book, Digital literacy.
MySpace is “… home for … ‘burnouts,’ ‘alternative kids,’ ‘art fags,’ punks, emos, goths, gangstas, queer kids, and other kids who didn’t play into the dominant high school popularity paradigm.