This lesson plan is designed to help teach middle school students how to be a good digital citizen.
- Subject:
- College and Career Awareness
- Material Type:
- Nearpod
- Author:
- Alison
- Date Added:
- 04/05/2021
This lesson plan is designed to help teach middle school students how to be a good digital citizen.
This lesson is designed to help students understand the importance of good digital citizenship in five different areas.
This lesson is intended to help second grade students understand the basics of what it means to be a good digital citizen. ISTE Student Standards for Digital Citizenship:2b Students engage in positive, safe, legal and ethical behavior when using technology, including social interactions online or when using networked devices.Photo credit for lesson image: Photo by Vonmega on ClipSafari
This is a lesson plan based around teaching students the Brain Dance in an aschronized format.
In this lesson, students will be tasked with creating their own digital escape room using Google Forms about a math concept they have learned throughout the year.
Lesson Plan for A class I took. The lesson is about Digital Footprint, Privacy, and Caution in sharing online.
This book was written by two artist educators who teach digital art and design studio foundation classes. While teaching classes that take place in software laboratories, we noticed that many of our students expected to learn to use software, but gave little consideration to aesthetics or art and design history. A typical first day question is, "Are we going to learn Photoshop in this class?" This book is a mash-up of the Bauhaus Basic Course and open source software such as Inkscape, Gimp, Firefox, and Processing. We have taken some of the visual principles and exercises from the Bauhaus Basic Course and adapted them into exercises for these applications.
This lesson is designed to teach students about their digital influence. That influence can be used in a positive or negative way. Things that are posted online have the potential to build people up or to tear them down. Part of being a good digital citizen is to make sure that we think before we post.
Digital LIteracy Project - This lesson is a final project using Adobe Spark in which students use the knowldege learned during the Digital Citizenship unit to cereate a video that demonstrates an understanding of digital literacy and the importance of being digitally literate in a digital world.
Digital LIteracy Project - This lesson is a final project in which students use the knowldege learned during the Digital Citizenship unit to create a project that demonstrates an understanding of digital literacy and the importance of being digitally literate in a digital world.
Utilizing their school-issued iPad or personal phone, students will capture their own images to represent literary elements from their personal reading book. This assignment is designed to blend principles from digital photography, design, and reading literature standards to demonstrate deeper understanding and critical thinking skills. This lesson plan was created by Andrea Settle. "The Flying Book Collage" by Antonio TwizShiz Edward is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0
This lesson will help teachers incorpate digital citizenship and photography skills into a lesson involving making muffins. NCI Visuals Food Muffins, by National Institutes of Health CC Public Domain Mark 1.0 from Wikimedia Commons
This is a lesson plan to incorporate digital photography into math. The students will create a mini video lesson for a topic that they have learned during their current term. This is a very general lesson plan.
This is a lesson that jump starts the development of digital portfolios in the classroom.
AI literacy is the knowledge and skills that enable humans to critically understand, evaluate, and use AI systems and tools to safely and ethically participate in an increasingly digital world.
Striking images can leave lasting impressions on viewers. In this lesson, students make text-self-world connections to a nature- or science-related topic as they collaboratively design a multimedia presentation.
Striking images can leave lasting impressions on viewers. In this lesson, students make text-self-world connections to a nature- or science-related topic as they collaboratively design a multimedia presentation.
Geographer Anne Knowles uses digital technologies to reimagine the past. In this fascinating talk, Knowles transports us to the Battle of Gettysburg, the turning point of the Civil War. Using Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and historical maps, she traces the footsteps of Robert E. Lee as he orders Pickett’s Charge -- and makes an educated guess why he made this crucial mistake. This resource also comes with questions for the video in either multiple choice or short answer format.
Atoms contain three types of subatomic particles: protons, which have a positive charge; neutrons, which have a neutral charge; and electrons, which have a negative charge.
This Lesson is to teach Graphic Design Student How to Design a Charming Collage Composition Using Adobe Photoshop.