NOW!
NOW!
1. Empowered learners
2. Digital citizens
3. Knowledge constructors
4. Innovative designers
5. Computational thinkers
6. Creative communicators
7. Global collaborators
e. “Being Responsible Digital Citizens” helps you teach your students what it
means to be digital citizens and make positive contributions to online
culture by establishing and cultivating a healthy digital footprint for
themselves and others. High school students especially need to know what
they put on the internet stays on the internet and can affect their ability to
enter college and find jobs. We can also offer lessons to reinforce to students
the importance of respecting ownership by properly citing copyrighted
sources and avoiding plagiarism.
f. “Expanding Technology and Coding Concepts” explains how to grow
students’ online presence by having them create digital portfolios of their
work, make better use of their personal technology, and develop their
computational and design skills through coding.
Schoology (www.schoology.com)
Showbie (www.showbie.com)
Seesaw (www.web.seeesaw.me)
Canvas (www.canvaslms.com/k-12)
Edmodo (www.edmodo.com)
Otus (www.Otus.com)
PowerSchool Learning (www.powerschool.com/solutions/lms)
Blackboard (www.blackboard.com)
Moodle (www.moodle.org)
D2l (www.d2l.com)
3. All site hosts provide specific tools for uploading content. These tools make
up a part of content management systems (CMS), which students can think
of as the operating system for the website. Have students use the site’s CMS
to select their site’s visual theme or template. As with the site name, the
theme should reflect the nature of the content students intend to put in
their portfolio.
4. Have students spend time outside of class familiarizing themselves with the
site’s tools and then start building out pieces of the site to host their content
during one or two class periods. As they do this, they can start populating
their site with text, image, files, and anything else that they want to include
in their portfolio.
5. Have students share a link to their site with you and their classroom peers
through the classroom LMS. Conduct a classroom discussion in which both
you and your students discuss what they like about the sites they created
and any ideas you or they might have to improve on them.
FaceTime(https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/facetime/id414307850?
mt=12): A video telephone and video chat service for conducting one-on-one
video calls among Apple devices