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
It's essential that students learn to think critically about the news and media they encounter every day. Students will demonstrate the ability to identify, evaluate, and use information effectively, find credible and trustworthy sources, and give proper credit. They will recognize how individuals and society are influenced by the media and the misrepresentations and stereotypes they sometimes promote. Students will reflect on their responsibilities and rights as creators in the online spaces where they consume, create, and share information.
Our Instructional Approach
Beyond Credible Sources
The current world of news media -- both internet-based and otherwise -- requires students to have a critical, but not cynical, eye. Our lessons seek to help them develop a critical lens, but not by disavowing the knowledge and experiences that they already bring to the table. Personal experiences can help students stay critically engaged, particularly when the source is social media or a news outlet with a particular point of view.
Fairness
We all have our favorites when it comes to where we get our news and entertainment media. And these favorites can reflect who we are: our personality, our gender, our cultural background, our age. The goal of these lessons is to help students find and use their favorite news and media sources more effectively and critically. Our lessons address this issue without creating or implying a hierarchy of credible news sources. When students are affirmed in their choices -- and in who they are -- they are much more likely to grow and learn.
GOOGLE SHARED DRIVE (saved materials)
As you teach good digital citizenship skills to your students, highlight the social emotional and well-being principles which go along with each concept.
Common Sense Media - Digital Passport
Search Shark
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ChildNet
DigiDuck
📑 educator guide & lesson activities
Lesson Focus: the reliability of online information
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Common Sense Media - Digital Compass
Recommended Games
Far-Fetched Facts
Hack-a-Wrong
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Common Sense Media - Social Media Test Drive
News in Social Media (5th-6th grade)
Students understand why fake news exists and how to identify the telltale signs of fake news on social media.
Responding to Breaking News (7th-8th grade)
Students learn how to react to This Just In! breaking news on social media and practice strategies for identifying reliable news online . 🎮play game
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Be Internet Awesome - Be Internet Alert
Interland - Reality River: Don't Fall for Fake
Know how to tell the difference between what’s real and what’s fake.
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Safe Online Surfing
FBI-SOS Cyber Surf Island (grades 3-8)
Here you will learn all about cyber safety and digital citizenship.
TOPIC: Locate Content
TOPIC: Evaluate Sources