Assignment 1: Reading Review Part B

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Continuing on with the focus of uniting digital citizenship with the library and using student voice, I found the following resources insightful. They provided thought ideas about leveraging student voice to create and/or enhance a DC curriculum

Resource List

What Your Students Really Need to Know About Digital Citizenship Vicki Davis, October 24, 2014 Updated November 1, 2017

Provides a new way of looking at how to guide students toward acting responsibly online using the "9 Key P's". Passwords, Private information, Personal information, photographs, Property, Permission, Protection, Professionalism, Personal Brand.

Social LEADia: Moving students from digital citizenship to digital leadership. Jennifer Casa-Todd, 2017

Helps teachers think about not just digital citizenship but how to encourage digital leaders and how students can develop the skills to leverage off social media. Focusing on students using social media to connect with others, explore passions and find ways to possibly influence change.

Growing global digital citizens: Better practices that build better learners. Lee Crockett 2018

Outlines a path for making a global digital citizenship program and provides tips on how to help students become global citizens.

Picture Books, Novels, and Nonfiction To Foster Digital Citizenship by Kristen Mattson Jan 24, 2019

Great picture books about digital citizenship which can be read at the beginning of any library class.

Ed Tech in the library, Debora Zeman Provides many ideas on how to foster student voice in the library through Ed Tech.


Works Cited

Casa-Todd, Jennifer. Social LEADia: Moving Students from Digital Citizenship to Digital Leadership. San Diego, Dave Burgess Consulting, 2017.

Crockett, Lee, and Andrew Churches. Growing Global Digital Citizens: Better Practices That Build Better Learners. Growing global digital citizens: Better practices that build better learners.

Davis, Vicki. "What Your Students Really Need to Know About Digital Citizenship." Edutopia, George Lucas Educational Foundation, 1 Nov. 2017, www.edutopia.org/blog/digital-citizenship-need-to-know-vicki-davis.

Mattson, Kristen. "Picture Books, Novels, and Nonfiction To Foster Digital Citizenship." School Library Journal, SJL, 24 Jan. 2019, www.slj.com/story/picture-books-novels-and-nonfiction-foster-digital-citizenship.

Miller, Shannon, and Deborah Zeman, editors. "Ed Tech in the Library." Leading from the Library, Future Ready Schools, 10 May 2022, leading-through-the-library.simplecast.com/episodes/ed-tech-in-the-library-with-deborah-zeman-3yn8kJsB.


Comments

  1. This is a good list of resources to help you get started with your inquiry. I appreciated the inclusion of the list of picture books and novels. I find these to be an excellent way to start a discussion about these important skills. Your annotations are a bit brief, A few more details may help your reader gain a deeper understanding of the sources you have curated and how they might be used to support your inquiry.

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