TPSS will use Common Sense Media as its main guide for our Digital Citizenship Curriculum. Visit the site to create a teacher account to access all of the free materials. There are also links to resources below for your use in the classroom.
🔔 Join Common Sense Media: Create your FREE Educator's Account
Overview
Today, we live in a world overflowing with digital media and technology. All of us -- adults and kids -- have constant access to real-time information from around the globe. But do the benefits of being ever-connected also come with risks to our mental health? It's an important question to ask -- especially for our kids. Our Media Balance & Well-Being lessons give students the space to reflect on their own media use. Plus, they'll get the tools they need to think critically about how digital media affects our communities and society overall.
Our Instructional Approach
Emotional Learning
To support students in developing an internal sense of "media balance," our lessons prompt students to reflect on the different feelings and emotions that arise when they engage in activities that involve digital media (streaming TV shows, playing online games, and so on). Some students may need additional support and practice in recognizing and interpreting these emotions. For example, prolonged social media use may result in a mix of positive and negative emotions. Students will need to think through these different emotional reactions to eventually draw conclusions about what "balanced" use means for them.
Balance
In our lessons on this topic, we do not use the term "addiction" in reference to device or digital media use. While we know that kids and adults are using their devices a lot -- and our research even tells us they feel "addicted" -- there's no official diagnosis for "device addiction" or consensus around what this phrase means. Moreover, the line between healthy and harmful use varies person to person and context to context (with evidence showing that already vulnerable teens, for instance, are more likely to exhibit unhealthy use of media), and research shows both positive and negative impacts of everything from social media to games. Our lessons focus on agency, not addiction, and quality time, not screen time. This means encouraging students to reflect on their own media diets and to develop individual plans for healthy media balance that consider both how media contributes productively and unproductively to their lives and relationships, and to grow the former and reduce the latter.
GOOGLE SHARED DRIVE (saved materials)
Common Sense Media Curriculum, with supplemental lesson suggestions.
Digital Citizenship newsletters are a quick reference guide for suggested lessons. Common Sense Media drives our TPSS Digital Citizenship curriculum, with the additional resources of Google's "Be Internet Awesome" and Typing Agent's Digital Citizenship lessons. Teachers should document digital citizenship lessons in their lesson plans and are required to turn in the Digital Citizenship Teacher Documentation Form at the end of the year.
Common Sense Media - Digital Passport
Twalkers
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iKeepSafe
Faux Paw
📁Faux Paw Goes to the Games - Balancing Real Life with Screen Time
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ChildNet
DigiDuck
📁Digiduck and the Magic Castle
📑 educator guide & lesson activities
Lesson Focus: playing games online
Common Sense Media - Social Media Test Drive
Healthy Social Media Habits
Explore how social media platforms are designed to keep your attention and practice healthy media habits to achieve media balance.
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Google for Education - Applied Digital Skills
Build Healthy Digital Habits
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As you teach good digital citizenship skills to your students, highlight the social emotional and well-being principles which go along with each concept.
BE WELL
TRAITS
Gratitude
Honesty
Creativity
SEL OUTCOME: Emotional Regulation
SEL GRADE LEVEL FOCUS:
prek/k - identifying emotions
1st - emotion awareness
2nd - emotion regulation
3rd - Emotion Advocacy
4th - Positive Self-Talk
5th - Stress Management