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Rescooped by Karen du Toit from What interests a web & tech geek MedLib? DIGICMB onto The Information Professional |
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"Global Digital Citizenship is a critical element of any teaching program at any level. Our students are connected. Irrespective of the age of the student, they are wired. We are seeing devices reducing in cost, increasing in availability, and entering most classrooms and almost every school."
[...] "...how do we teach Global Digital Citizenship, a fluency that is critical at all levels of education? 1. Clarity and rationale—Whether we are giving the students guidelines (my personal preference) or sets of rules, there must be clarity and a transparent rationale behind the statements we make." 2. Understanding and Purpose—This is the communication aspect with the students and the community. You have to develop and instill in the students an understanding of WHY we are making these recommendations and setting these expectations. 3. Monitoring and consequences—As critical as rationale and purpose, monitoring and consequences should be transparent, timely, and appropriate. 4. Individual and community involvement—In developing and implementing our digital citizenship guidelines and processes we sought, valued, and used feedback from staff, students, and the community."
Via Ana Cristina Pratas Delete the scoop?
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Digital fluency: “In our new report published today, we argue that digital fluency – what we call the ability t... Delete the scoop?
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This sounds similar to what the University of Chicago has done. The library of the future better have a big budget.