Evangeline Parish School System requires that students in grades K-12 receive at least 2 lessons in Digital Citizenship each 9-week grading period. Evangeline Parish School System will use Common Sense Education as the basis of the Digital Citizenship curriculum. Common Sense Education divides its curriculum into six main topics of Digital Citizenship. Additional resources with links are denoted on this digital citizenship page as well.
Each teacher must teach 2 lessons each 9-week period for a minimum of 8 lessons per year that are appropriate for your students. Elementary lessons are shorter than middle and high school lessons. Please ensure that you are selecting a variety of topics. There is no particular order, but a requirement of 2 lessons per nine weeks. Lessons must be documented in OnCourse.
“Children are growing up with the power of digital media and technology to explore, connect, create, and learn in new ways. With this power, young people have great opportunities but face challenges and dilemmas. Schools are dealing with the ramifications, including issues such as online safety, cyberbullying, privacy, hate speech, misinformation, and digital distraction. To address these issues, schools are creating a positive culture around media and technology by incorporating digital citizenship education as part of their curricula.
Digital citizenship is the responsible use of technology to learn, create, and participate.
Common Sense’s Digital Citizenship Curriculum addresses critical issues facing children in a fast-changing world of media and technology. The innovative lessons teach students to think critically and develop the habits of mind to navigate digital dilemmas in their everyday lives.
Common Sense Education’s Digital Citizenship Curriculum:
• Is flexible and easy to implement. The curriculum includes multiple lessons across 13 grades (for ages 5 to 18), with videos. Grades 2–12 include six lessons per year, and K–1 includes three lessons per year. The lessons range from 30 minutes (K–2) to 45 minutes (grades 3–8) to 50 minutes (grades 9–12).
• Addresses six core topics of digital citizenship. The core topics, introduced on the icons below, are based on the latest research on children, media, and technology.
• Teaches skills and habits of mind. The lessons teach the skills and habits of mind students need to stay safe, think critically, and take control of their digital lives.
• Is developmentally engaging. From characters and song videos for primary schoolers to digital dilemma scenarios and “Teen Voices” videos for secondary schoolers, complex topics are addressed appropriately and engagingly. Select lessons also have accompanying interactive games and extension activities.
• Is available in Spanish. All student materials and parent resources are available in Spanish for English language learners.
• Includes family engagement resources. Tip sheets, advice, and turnkey presentations are included to educate families. All parent materials are available in Spanish, and select materials are available in Arabic, Chinese, Farsi, Korean, Russian, Spanish, Tagalog, Urdu, and Vietnamese.
• Aligns with U.S. education standards: These include Common Core (ELA), ISTE, CASEL, AASL, and TEKS.
• Supports E-rate compliance. The curriculum can be used as a criterion for CIPA compliance for E-rate.” (Common Sense Education, commonsense.org/education)
Additional Digital Citizenship & Internet Safety Lesson Resources |
To make the most of the Internet, kids need to be prepared to make smart decisions. Be Internet Awesome teaches kids the fundamentals of digital citizenship and safety so they can explore the online world with confidence. |
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Connect Safely, connectsafely.org provides a host of up to date resources such as quick guides, safety tips, webcasts and podcasts that all promote online safety, good citizenship skills, media literacy and navigating social media discussions with students. |