Virginia Society for Technology in Education
by timstahmer
These engaging activities can spark conversations about oversharing, digital footprints, cyberbullying, and more.
As physical distancing becomes a feature of students' everyday lives, social media has emerged as an important outlet for them to stay connected with friends and family. At the same time, not all students have access to the support they need to learn how to use social media in a way that's healthy. And for students from lower-income families, online negative experiences are more likely to spill over into their offline lives. Yet, having a conversation with young people about how they use social media can be a daunting task.
To prepare young people for the real-life digital dilemmas they will face on social media, Common Sense Education, and a group of researchers at the Cornell Social Media Lab co-developed Social Media TestDrive. This online simulation allows middle school students a chance to explore a social media interface without actually having to create a social media account.
For Digital Citizenship Week 2020, we encourage you to try out Social Media TestDrive in your classroom. Each Social Media TestDrive module is aligned to one of the core digital citizenship topics and lessons from Common Sense Education's K-12 Digital Citizenship Curriculum (for more information, see the educator guide). Each module is organized into four sections: a tutorial, a guided activity, a free-play section, and a reflection page. A module takes 20- 25 minutes to complete.
Here are some ideas for how you can implement TestDrive during Digital Citizenship Week and beyond:
For review: If you taught one of our lessons at the beginning of the year, you can have students complete a TestDrive module as a way to revisit key digital citizenship concepts they might have forgotten or that might have become more relevant since the start of the school year.
For homework or asynchronous activity: TestDrive modules are designed to be self-directed, so you can have students complete them as homework. Ask students to save their answers to the module's reflection questions as PDFs so they can share them with you.
For synchronous class discussion: Have students complete a module and discuss their experiences with the rest of the class. You can use the guiding questions below to make sure students address key topics from the lesson.
Once you decide which approach works best for you and your students, identify which modules align best with the topics or themes you want to emphasize this year.
Media Balance & Well-Being
The Ups and Downs of Social Media: Students reflect on how social media can make them feel and learn how to use social media in a positive and balanced way.
Healthy Social Media Habits: Students explore how social media platforms are designed to keep their attention and practice healthy media habits to achieve media balance.
Privacy & Security
Scams and Phishing: Students understand the consequences of identity theft and learn how to identify and take action against phishing scams on social media.
Social Media Privacy: Students understand how social media sites collect information about users and learn strategies for protecting privacy on social media.
Digital Footprint & Identity
Shaping Your Digital Footprint: Students explore how actions on social media create a digital footprint and learn skills to positively shape digital footprints.
Online Identities: Students learn how to manage self-presentation and how online identities can change with different audiences on social media.
Relationships, Communication, & Cyberbullying
Is This Private Information?: Students learn what is safe to share with different social media audiences and what kind of information is inappropriate to share on social media.
How to Be an Upstander: Students identify signs of cyberbullying and practice how to respond when seeing cyberbullying happening to others.
News & Media Literacy
News in Social Media: Students learn why fake news exists and how to identify the telltale signs of fake news on social media.
Responding to Breaking News!: Students learn how to react to breaking news on social media and practice strategies for identifying reliable news online.
Using Social Media TestDrive as a family engagement resource.
Social Media TestDrive works best with students who are considering joining social media in the near future or those who are new users. This makes TestDrive a great way to spark conversations with kids about thoughtful and responsible social media use. Here are a few ways to engage families using TestDrive:
Written by Daniel Vargas Campos, an Education Content Specialist with Common Sense Education. This post was originally published on their blog.
by vsteadmin
VSTE is pleased to welcome Sarah Thomas (@@sarahdateechur) as guest moderator for the fifth week of our Slow Tweet Chat Book Group. She will be leading us in a discussion of the Fourth chapter of The Missing Voices in EdTech: Bringing Diversity Into EdTech by this year's conference keynoter, Rafranz Davis. This chapter focuses on the unspoken inequity: people of color of edtech. While we certainly encourage you to read the book, you are welcome to share and comment even if you haven't quite finished the reading.
Hashtags: #vstechat, #vste, #ce16
Register ahead of time for reminders and the chance to win VSTE swag!
Just getting started with Twitter and Tweet Chats? Here are a few resources for learning:
by vsteadmin
VSTE is pleased to welcome Dr. Mano Talaiver (@manotalaiver) as guest moderator for the fourth week of our Slow Tweet Chat Book Group. She will be leading us in a discussion of the Fourth chapter of The Missing Voices in EdTech: Bringing Diversity Into EdTech by this year's conference keynoter, Rafranz Davis. This chapter focuses on missing women's voices. While we certainly encourage you to read the book, you are welcome to share and comment even if you haven't quite finished the reading.
Hashtags: #vstechat, #vste, #ce16
Register ahead of time for reminders and the chance to win VSTE swag!
Just getting started with Twitter and Tweet Chats? Here are a few resources for learning:
by vsteadmin
VSTE is pleased to welcome Albemarle County student Julian Waters as guest moderator for the third week of our Slow Tweet Chat Book Group. He will be leading us in a discussion of the third chapter of The Missing Voices in EdTech: Bringing Diversity Into EdTech by this year's conference keynoter, Rafranz Davis. This chapter focuses on missing student voices. While we certainly encourage you to read the book, you are welcome to share and comment even if you haven't quite finished the reading.
Register ahead of time for reminders and the chance to win VSTE swag!
Just getting started with Twitter and Tweet Chats? Here are a few resources for learning: