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In this down-to-earth guide, educators will learn successful strategies for embedding digital citizenship into their library and school instruction.Digital citizenship, the ethical and responsible use of technology, is more important than ever for 21st-century learners and families-all of whom are spending increasingly long hours behind screens. Because libraries and schools are often the mediators between technology and individuals, educators must know what digital citizenship is and how they can understand, program, and promote it.
In
Advocating Digital Citizenship, readers will learn from a public librarian and two current school librarians a wealth of real-life, easy-to-follow strategies to make libraries healthy, equitable, and safe digital spaces for everyone. Covering complex but important topics like digital law, digital etiquette, and media literacy, the authors help librarians and teachers establish a curriculum, write programming, and collaborate with colleagues to achieve buy-in at all levels.
Educators will benefit from a chapter dedicated to lesson plans, and a practical appendix includes digital citizenship program outlines, policy and procedure documents, and conversation prompts around technology to share with families. In our current climate, which requires so many new digital experiences for people of all ages, digital citizenship instruction is timely and essential.
Sommario
Introduction: The Role of Digital Citizenship in Libraries and SchoolsChapter 1: Media Literacy and Digital Law
Chapter 2: Communication and Etiquette
Chapter 3: Creating Policies and Best Practices
Chapter 4: Programming and Advocacy
Chapter 5: Implementing Digital Citizenship in Public Schools
Chapter 6: School Libraries: Co-teaching and Collaboration with Digital Citizenship
Chapter 7: Startup Lessons
Appendix A: Sample Lateral Reading ProgramAppendix B: Sample Program for Teaching Copyright Law to Elementary-Aged StudentsAppendix C: Sample Social Media PolicyAppendix D: Sample Minecraft Mentor Program for TeensAppendix E: Sample Digital Parenting EventReferencesIndex
Info autore
Carrie Rogers-Whitehead is the founder of Digital Respons-Ability, USA, a mission-based company that works with educators, parents, and students to teach digital citizenship. Rogers-Whitehead worked in libraries for a decade and has been an adjunct professor for eight years at Salt Lake Community College. She is the author of seven books. Serving Teens and Adults on the Autism Spectrum: A Guide for Libraries (2020) won a 2021 Outstanding Reference Source award from the American Library Association.Amy O. Milstead works as a librarian at a public high school in Rockwall, Texas, USA. She holds a master’s of library science and instructional technology from East Texas A&M. Milstead has had the unique experience of being a librarian at the elementary, middle school, and high school levels. She has opened three brand new school libraries. She was proud to be on the Mesquite ISD team that won the American Library Association School Library of the Year in 2020. She is co-author of Advocating Digital Citizenship: Resources for the Library and Classroom (Bloomsbury Libraries Unlimited, 2022).