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| Version | User | Scope of changes |
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| Aug 12 2008, 3:03 AM EDT (current) | dbigue | 3 words deleted |
| Aug 12 2008, 3:01 AM EDT | dbigue | 19 words added, 15 words deleted, 1 photo added, 1 photo deleted |
According to ISTE,The International Society for Technology in Education, in their new NETS (National Educational Technology Standards) Digital Citizenship is shown when students understand the human, cultural, and societal issues related to technology and practice legal and ethical behavior. In practice students will:
In our position as teachers and educators, we need to do the following to teach 'digital citizenship' skills to our students.
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- Search Engine Tools:
Easy who is:Searching for Bias: The Internet is an open medium, allowing anyone with an opinion to post a webpage. Validating the information on a web page can be very tricky. This three step process may not be fool proof, but will definitely help you and your students validate web sites they find from the typical 'Google' search.
- Find out who owns a website by truncating the URL to the domain name and using 'easywhois' to see who owns the domain. (http://www.martinlutherking.org)
- Internet Archive's: Way Back Machine: This site will show you the history of almost any site on the Internet. What did your favorite site look like early in its life?