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Rescooped by Jack Patterson from Leadership to change our schools' cultures for the 21st Century onto Social media and education |
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10 Interactive Lessons By Google On Digital Citizenship |
Emaze - create amazing presentations |
Teaching Respect and Responsibility — Even to Digital Natives |
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Umschalten auf sicher Surfen! Der KinderServer bietet Sicherheit für Kinder im Netz. Das Besondere: Mit einem Klick werden Computer und mobile internetfähige Geräte schnell und leicht in einen kindgerechten, sicheren Surfmodus geschaltet. Riesiger Surfraum: geprüfte Kinderseiten und für Kinder unbedenkliche Erwachsenenseiten von fragFINN und Blinde Kuh inklusive aller Seitenstark-Seiten sowie gekennzeichnete Webseiten bis 12 Jahre Einfache Installation für die meisten Computer, Handys und Tablets Passwortgeschütztes Umschalten von Kinder- zu Erwachsenenmodus Freigabe zusätzlicher Webseiten durch die Eltern möglich Kostenlos für Eltern, Schulen, Kinder- und Jugendeinrichtungen Via Gust MEES
Gust MEES's curator insight,
February 28, 1:02 PM
Unbedingt zusammen mit den Kindern anschauen und gebrauchen, sowie auch Erklärungen dazu abegeben...
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Are passwords dead?
According to Wired's Mat Honan, they ought to be. Honan is the technology journalist who was hacked last year. In just a few minutes, his entire digital life, including photos of his young daughter, disappeared. If it can happen to a tech-savvy writer like Honan, it can happen to anyone. Via Berend de Jonge, juandoming, Gust MEES Delete the scoop?
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The FBI has launched an Internet safety program for youths called FBI-SOS... Via Gust MEES, Dennis T OConnor Delete the scoop?
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Social networking, especially via Twitter and Facebook, has become a major part in modern life for many millions of people.
We need to educate young people to understand that it is wrong to write anything on a social networking site which you wouldn’t say to someone’s face. As it is, it is all to easy to get carried away when you’re addressing someone you can’t see and whom you may not know personally.
Second, Twitter and Facebook are, as has been well publicised, a groomer’s dream. It is vital that children – and I’m sure most parents and schools are already doing this – be carefully drilled in spotting the dangers. That means, for example, never posting suggestive photographs, ‘flirting’ online with strangers, or agreeing to meet anyone you’ve ‘met’ only via a social networking site.
The key to making all this work, however, is that teachers and schools have to be open-minded and prepared to embrace new ways of working.
Many, of course, are doing so with enthusiasm, ===> but some are still locked in dinosaur mode. <===
Read more in the article, a MUST!
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Online gaming used to be an activity confined to dimly lit arcades, but it can now be enjoyed by anyone and everyone.
A MUST read for parents and teachers: http://about-threats.trendmicro.com/ebooks/keep-your-children-safe-online/#/1/
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