Digital Citizenship Collaborative Unit
Digital Citizenship Collaborative Unit
Digital Citizenship Collaborative Unit
Overview
This collaborative unit will be taught to a 6th grade class. The class is taught by Jennifer
Craft. Jennifer and I worked together when I taught 6th grade as well. We have collaborated on
some projects before, but they were all math based. This will be new for us in creating a unit
about digital citizenship! I am looking forward to working with Mrs. Craft in this project.
The topic covered in this unit will be Collaborating. We will begin the unit by discussing
what digital citizenship is and looks like in the middle school setting. Our school system follows
a traditional 6-8 middle school. So, these students are new to middle school and possibly new to
digital citizenship. Therefore, I would like to begin the unit explaining what digital citizenship is
and why it is important. Once we establish a clear understanding of digital citizenship, we will
discuss cyberbullying in the second lesson. The final lesson will be about shopping safe online.
My goal for the unit is for students to come out of it with a clear understanding of digital
citizenship,cyberbullying, and safe shopping online. To give students who are curious more
resources, I am including extra resources and activities for students to explore on their own.
In the class we will be teaching the unit, there are 18 students. 10 are male and 8 are
female. There are 12 Caucasian students, 4 African-American students, and 2 Asian students.
The students are all 12 years of age. 14 of the students say that they either have their own social
media account or frequently use someone’s. There are 4 students with IEP’s in the class. 3 of the
students are SLD and one student is OHI. 6 students in the class are served by a 504.
To ensure that the lessons met the needs of all the learners in the classroom, I
collaborated closely with Mrs. Craft when writing activities to be sure that the SWD in her
classroom would have their needs met. Based on my knowledge from Morrison, Ross, and
Kemp; these activities were easier to design that if I did not have this knowledge. Since I figured
out the learner characteristics first, I was able to meet these needs before hand rather than trying
to tweak my lessons last minute. Also, since I will be delivering the unit in 3 separate lessons, I
will have the chance to revise the lessons as needed before delivering the next lesson!
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Module 2: Cyberbullying
Introduction:
To introduce students to this lesson, we will watch this short video and discuss the different parts
of the video. Students are not always aware of the different types of cyberbullying, so this will be
a great conversation starter.
Curation:
Click here to view my curation for the unit, which includes resources for students to explore
beyond the lessons.
Activities:
I will start students in small groups to complete the following activity from HealthPoweredKids:
(see Curation for complete lesson) Since lesson times are 20 minutes, this activity will be the
only one we have time for.
As a group, make a list of things that people can do to help stop cyberbullying. Here are some
things you can add if they aren’t mentioned:
If someone is being mean to you or someone else online tell a teacher, parent or other trusted
adult.
If someone is being mean to you or someone else online, tell them to stop. Sometimes quietly
standing up for yourself or someone else is enough to convince a bullying to back off.
Only accept friend/follow requests from people you know in real life. Set privacy settings so
information about you (including images) are not visible to the public. Every time you post or
share, carefully consider whether you want it to live on forever, because it might.
Use good passwords and never share them with anyone. Generally, the longer the password, the
stronger it is. Adding complexity, such as uppercase and lowercase letters, numbers and special
characters, makes it even stronger.
uppercase letter (e.g. A, B, C, D, E)
lowercase letter (e.g. a, b, c, d, e)
number (e.g. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5)
special character or symbol (e.g., ! @ # $ % & * _ + ~ . ,>)
Make your password memorable for you. Don’t use information people know about you, such as
family members’ names, pet names, addresses or license plate numbers. And don’t repeat
characters more than three times in a row.
Ask your parents or caregiver to help you if someone if cyberbullying to help you decide how
you should respond. If your caregiver is asking for your password – maybe be willing to share it
so that they can help protect you. Remember, sometimes caregivers ask for passwords not
because they don’t trust you, but because they are helping to protect your from cyberbullying!
Assessment:
To assess students on this module, I will create a Blooket. Blooket is a review game that students
love. Questions are created by the teacher and become gamified when uploaded. I can also
review the data from the Blooket to see where students are having shortcomings.
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