I recently found 10 ways to become an excellent digital citizen in social media. I pay close attention to social media, and my job is to share Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest, and other topics that teachers, principals, students, and parents are contributing.
The digital world continues to grow and is excellent in various respects. However, as with everything else, there are some major flaws in the digital age. One problem is people's online behavior. For various reasons, what people are doing online is not tried in the real world. Sometimes this happens in a nice way. Because it allows you to more easily meet people with other people, you can post works that they might be too timid for accessing the Internet. In many cases, online activities can lead to harmful behavior of people who do not want to talk or do not do online.
As a teacher, we need to do our utmost to educate our students on the dangers of this behavior. A great way to do this is to compare real life comparisons. Dan McCabe has posted a wonderful infographic on the ten ways ISTE will become an excellent digital citizen. Here you can read articles on infographics. This chart summarizes 10 different ways people are good citizens in a row and explains this in the digital world in the next column. I pasted a complete infographic on the bottom
How else can people become good digital citizens? What disadvantages and benefits did you see in the digital age? Why do you think people are more embarrassed than usual, they violate the law and want to deviate from online social norms rather than reality?
Tori Pakizer is a social media editor for SimpleK12.com. She regularly writes articles about using teaching skills in the K - 12 classroom and focuses on how teachers use Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest and other social media. You can follow Tori and SimpleK12 on Twitter @ SimpleK12. If you have an idea to use social media at school, please send a message or hint to editor@simplek12.com.
Please read something on paper everyday. I do not think reading the digital screen is really good for you, so just read the old-fashioned way. At least 10 minutes book, newspaper, magazine. Unless it is BuzzFeed or other nonsense. This article is only considered as a high level literature and is for reference only. Please attend the meeting 5-10 minutes ago. Let's meet each time. Do not schedule consecutive meetings. Please give me the opportunity to gather and join the next meeting as soon as possible. I worked with a motto "If you are not late 15 minutes ago." '15 minutes is a long time but as soon as you respect their time and to show people that you value it
As a teacher, we need to do our utmost to educate our students on the dangers of this behavior. A great way to do this is to compare real life comparisons. Dan McCabe has posted a wonderful infographic on the ten ways ISTE will become an excellent digital citizen. Here you can read articles on infographics. This chart summarizes 10 different ways people are good citizens in a row and explains this in the digital world in the next column. I pasted the full infographic on the bottom. Tori Pakizer is a social media editor for SimpleK12.com. She regularly writes articles about using teaching skills in the K - 12 classroom and focuses on how teachers use Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest and other social media. You can follow Tori and SimpleK12 on Twitter @ SimpleK12. If you have an idea to use social media at school, please send a message or hint to editor@simplek12.com.
If you are not digital native, you are at least a citizen of the digital world, so you will contact the digital world in various ways. One of them is social media. It allows us to share and interact with each other, it is a lot of fun. Unfortunately, since social media is far from peaceful places, this article will explain every aspect, from its strengths, to psychological impacts and broader problems such as the expansion of bullying.