Welcome to Mrs. Salem's PRIVATE Website
Grade: Middle School
Goal: Students research a digital citizenship issue, interview peers, create Canva charts with their findings, and produce:
Main Outcome: a short video in Canva (1–2 minutes)
Additional Outcome (choose one): 1-page poster, infographic, Scratch game, or PollEv survey
In this project, students will become digital citizens and changemakers. Working in small groups, they will research an issue in digital citizenship, interview classmates, analyze results with Canva charts, and create a short campaign video. To strengthen their message, they will also produce one additional product (poster, infographic, Scratch game, or PollEv survey).
This project gives students the chance to think critically, act creatively, and use technology responsibly, while addressing real-world issues they face daily online.
The objectives of this project are to empower students to understand and promote digital citizenship through research, collaboration, and multimedia creation. Students will learn to define and explain key digital issues, analyze peer perspectives through interviews, and visualize data using Canva charts. They will then synthesize their knowledge into a persuasive video campaign supported by one additional product. By the end, students will demonstrate not only their digital literacy but also critical thinking, ethical awareness, creativity, and teamwork, in alignment with Bloom’s Taxonomy.
Remembering: Recall and define key aspects of digital citizenship (e.g., privacy, cyberbullying, AI ethics).
Understanding: Explain how digital behaviors affect safety, well-being, and reputation.
Applying: Conduct peer interviews and apply Canva tools to design visual charts.
Analyzing: Interpret interview results, identifying patterns and trends.
Evaluating: Critique peer projects and assess the effectiveness of different digital behaviors.
Creating: Design a digital campaign (video + product) that delivers a clear, persuasive message to peers.
Cyberbullying Prevention
Protecting Online Privacy
Digital Footprints
Screen Time Balance
Misinformation & Fake News
Kindness & Respect Online
AI & Ethics Online
Data Privacy & Big Tech
Digital Addiction & Mental Health
Cancel Culture & Online Reputation
Hate Speech & Online Communities
Deepfakes & Media Literacy
Day 1 – Introduction & Group Formation
Watch short video on digital citizenship.
Class discussion: “Why is this important for us?”
Groups (3–4 students) form, select a topic, and start planning.
Day 2 – Research
Groups research their topic using trusted sources (Common Sense Media, StopBullying.gov, NetSmartz, etc.).
Summarize 3–5 key facts to use in their campaign.
Day 3 – Interviews
Groups design 6 to 8 interview questions.
Conduct peer surveys (8–10+ responses).
Day 4 – Data Analysis & Canva Charts
Tally responses; calculate totals/percentages.
Create at least one Canva chart (pie/bar chart).
Start video storyboard (script, visuals, where to place chart).
Day 5 – Campaign Creation (Part 1)
Build main Canva video (1–2 min).
Begin additional product (poster, infographic, Scratch game, or PollEv survey).
Day 6 – Campaign Creation (Part 2) & Peer Review
Continue building video and product.
Groups exchange drafts and give feedback.
Revise for clarity and polish.
Day 7 – Campaign Launch
Groups present Canva video + additional product.
Posters/infographics displayed, Scratch games played, PollEv surveys taken live.
Class reflection: “What did we learn about being responsible digital citizens?”
Main Outcome: 1–2 minute Canva video (includes slogan, message, and Canva chart with interview data).
Additional Outcome (choose one): 1-page poster, infographic, Scratch game, or PollEv survey.
Presentation: 2–3 minutes per group.
Explore what cyberbullying is, why it happens, and how it affects people.
Show strategies for prevention (blocking/reporting, standing up for others, using respectful language).
Campaign could focus on “Choose Kindness Online” or “Stop Cyberbullying Before It Starts.”
Learn how to protect personal information (strong passwords, privacy settings, not oversharing online).
Explore risks of sharing too much (identity theft, scams).
Campaign could include “Think Before You Share” or “Protect Your Password, Protect Yourself.”
Explain how everything posted online can last forever and affect future opportunities (college, jobs, reputation).
Show positive ways to build a “good” digital footprint.
Campaign could say “Your Future Self is Watching” or “Post Smart, Stay Safe.”
Explore effects of too much screen time (sleep issues, less focus, less exercise).
Highlight benefits of balance (offline hobbies, time outdoors, family).
Campaign could include “Unplug to Recharge” or “Balance Your Screen, Balance Your Life.”
Discuss how to tell real vs. false information online.
Show strategies (fact-checking, checking sources, questioning headlines).
Campaign could say “Think Before You Share” or “Spot the Fake, Share the Truth.”
Focus on empathy, respectful communication, and building positive online communities.
Show that words online matter just as much as in person.
Campaign could include “Spread Kindness, Not Hate” or “Be the Reason Someone Smiles Online.”
Explore how artificial intelligence (recommendation systems, chatbots, deepfakes) shapes what we see online.
Discuss fairness, bias, and ethics (e.g., “Is it right for AI to decide what we watch or read?”).
Campaign could highlight “AI Can Help Us, But Who Controls It?”
Investigate how companies collect, store, and use personal data (tracking, ads, targeted content).
Discuss the trade-off between convenience and privacy.
Campaign could say “Your Data is Valuable—Protect It” or “Don’t Let Big Tech Track You.”
Explore how too much time on social media, gaming, or streaming affects mood, focus, and relationships.
Offer strategies for healthy digital habits (screen limits, breaks, balance).
Campaign could include “Log Out to Tune In” or “Screens Can Wait, Your Health Can’t.”
Discuss how online actions can lead to public shaming or “canceling.”
Explore fairness: accountability vs. overreaction.
Campaign could ask “Should One Mistake Define a Person?”
Explore the difference between free speech and harmful speech online.
Highlight ways to report or reduce toxic online environments.
Campaign could include “Words Matter—Use Them Wisely” or “Silence Hate, Amplify Respect.”
Show how fake videos and images can trick people.
Teach how to spot manipulated media and why it’s dangerous.
Campaign could say “Don’t Believe Everything You See” or “Double-Check Before You Share.”