Book Creator

Dennison Sept Digital Citizenship

by Angel Gallegos-Jung

Pages 2 and 3 of 12

September Digital Citizenship
We define who we are!
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This month’s digital citizenship topic is Digital Footprint & Identity.
Students consider the benefits and risks of online sharing and explore how a digital persona can affect one’s sense of self, reputation, and relationships. 

Motto:We define who we are.

Guiding question: How can I cultivate my digital identity in ways that are responsible and empowering ?
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Vocabulary
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footprint:
The impression left by a shoe or foot on the ground or a surface
leave a mark:
Make a visible impression on
pass on:
An act of sharing something
permanent:
Lasting; remain unchanged indefinitely
express:
Share who you are
protect:
Keep safe from harm
privacy:
Being free from public attention
proud:
Feeling pleasure in your actions
respect:
showing consideration for the feelings of others
Discussion questions?
What is a digital footprint?
Is it a positive or negative thing to have one?
Does everyone have one?
What would you find if you googled your name?
Would you be proud to share your digital footprint with your friends, teachers, parents, grandparents?
How do you express yourself?
How do you protect your privacy?
How will you respect other people's privacy?
How will you manage your digital footprint?
How can you build a positive digital footprint?
Check out these 4 tips
1) Be a role model.
Before you post a photo of your kid on social media, ask if it's OK to share. Not only will you give them control over their own digital footprint, you'll also be showing them what you expect them to do with others' photos.
2)Use privacy settings.
Together, go through all the settings on new apps to make sure you both know what information your kids are sharing. Especially in the beginning, it's better to share very little.
3)Question everything.
Before you sign school forms or register for a new online service for your kid, check the privacy policy to see what kind of information you're giving the school or company and who they're sharing it with. Sharing some data might be required, but you may be able to opt out of others. Talk with your kid about why it's important to protect your personal data.
4)Use a celebrity as an example.
With older kids, choose a celebrity or another famous person and look through their Twitter or Instagram posts with your kid. Discuss your impressions of them based on what they post. Ask your kid what kind of image they'd like to project online.
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