Raising the Digital Generation – What Can Parents Do?

The other day I was fortunate enough to experience a Parent Coffee Morning, run regularly (first Wednesday of each month) by our school. This particular day had three workshops running, Summer Reading, Summer Math & Summer Technology and parents rotated through each session in 30 minute slots. We had over 50 parents attend which was very exciting! In the session that I was helping in (getting a taste of what part of my new job will be like) was of course, Summer Technology – ideas for what you and your child could doing over the summer with technology.

In one of the sessions, it became very clear that a lot of parents are afraid. Afraid of privacy on the internet, afraid of managing their child’s activity on the internet, afraid of things they’re not even sure about and can’t really explain. Whilst some are afraid, they realise that the internet is not going to go away and those fears need to be addressed, conversations need to be had, and information needs to be sought.

So when Jeff Utecht shared with our Grade 5 team an article he came across regarding our children and the use of social media, it seemed like the perfect catalyst to start the information/conversation ball rolling.  Whilst the rules of having a facebook account are “you must be 13 years of age or over”, the reality is more than half of our Grade 5 students already have a facebook account and are using facebook to a certain degree. We certainly do not encourage the use the facebook in Grade 5 but it would be remiss of us to blindly stick our heads in the sand and pretend that some of our students aren’t using it.

Below is an extract from the article. (click this link for the full article) I’ve shared it on our classroom blog for the parents of my students.  It is very informative, has simple but very effective tips for parents and it’s well worth taking the time to read the entire article.

Who are your kids friending on Facebook? What are they really texting to their classmates? How much online time is too much?

Too often, parents who are misinformed about the social web (willfully or otherwise) will shut their kids out of it completely, only to find they are logging in anyway. If you’re not taking an active role in your child’s online life, you may be missing important opportunities to ensure they are on the path toward “digital citizenship,” and protected from inappropriate content and people.

www.flickr.com_photos_courosa_4446157327

http://www.flickr.com/photos/courosa/4446157327

Do You Know Where Your Footprints Are?

Ding Ding …… Round Course Two begins for CoETaIL.Asia

Enduring Understandings:

  • Online behaviors and actions impact the access and safety of personal information.
  • Responsible use of online tools can help protect the personal information of others.

Essential Question:

When and where should we be teaching students about their digital footprint?

This weeks readings were from Kim Komondo’s Your Online Reputation Can Hurt Your Job Search and Protect Your Digital Footprint from kutv.com

I was fortunate enough to have our afternoon presenter, Silvia Tolisano, stay with me after her presentation at ISB.  We discussed in depth one night the need to own your domain name and those of your children. Thankfully my name and those of my children are unusual enough to still be available domain names.  What I have realised I need to do is take charge of my blog name so that I can continue to control what happens with it.  I’d not really given any thought to what might happen if someone decided to “kick me off” my name.  All my thoughts and ideas would disappear over time as someone began to use my name legally.  Whilst I would like to believe that no-one would do that deliberately, I realise that not everyone  is as idealistic in web ethics as I am.

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Google Alerts, RSS feeds of Google Search Terms, Technorati and Edublogs’ incoming links  have always kept me informed of how my digital footprint is impacting on others.  I believe it is necessary to keep an eye on how and when our names are being used on the internet for a variety of reasons.

Clarence Fisher also believes that tracking your digital footprint is an essential part of working online and these are essential basic skills for us and for our students as well. His Digital Footprint blog post is an informative read as he shares how he tracks his digital footprint and the reasons why he does it.

It is great to see what people are writing about you. It gives you a chance to respond to posts people write and also it keeps your finger on the pulse of any ongoing conversations.”

I listened to Ewan McIntosh, at an unconference session at Learning2.0 in Shanghai, about how he has already begun to protect and nurture his young daughter’s digital footprint before she is even old enough to walk let alone blog!  I remember thinking how that was just a little bit over-the-top but as my learning journey continues down the path of 21st Century Digital Literacy, it has become more obvious that looking after your digital footprint is the same as looking after any of your tools in your toolbox and it’s the same as looking after your own reputation.  YOU need to do it – no one else is going to.

Online safety and digital citizenship in the classroom when working with blogs, wikis and any other tools that leave a footprint of ourselves online is a message that we, as educators, have a responsibility/need to continually push at ANY level.  It’s no different to teaching encouraging students to respect themselves, or respect one another in any space they are in.

Only this time the space is the internet and this space keeps a record of all behaviour – the good, the bad and the ugly.

And anybody can look at it.  Anytime.  Anywhere.

Image Attribution:  TeachingSagittarian