Assign These Insightful Digital Citizenship Week Activities
In 2010, Common Sense Education teamed up with Project Zero at the Harvard Graduate School of Education to launch a joint Digital Literacy and Citizenship Curriculum, which became Digital Citizenship Week two years later.
Now, during the third week of October each year, teachers in all subject areas share Digital Citizenship Week activities. These activities teach students how best to interact with others online and engage with online content.
Explore activities you can use in your classes and even some resources to help you incorporate digital citizenship lessons into your election 2024 lesson plans.
Start a digital citizenship course with your students
Explore the Newsela Social Studies digital citizenship and media literacy courses for each grade band. The courses cover age-appropriate topics such as validating sources, staying safe online, and learning more about new digital technologies like AI.
Elementary digital citizenship and media literacy course
For your youngest students, understanding digital citizenship is an extension of the life skills we’re already teaching them in the real world. Key points include staying safe, being kind, and recognizing when to step away from a situation. This course covers units like:
Middle school digital citizenship and media literacy course
Middle schoolers use technology even more than their elementary school counterparts, primarily for entertainment, interacting with friends, and doing schoolwork. It’s important that they understand how to evaluate the content they encounter online to determine fact from fiction. This course covers units like:
High school digital citizenship and media literacy course
High schoolers encounter technology and online content in every aspect of their lives, from socializing to school and work. Learning how to use these tools correctly and responsibly can help students as they go out in the real world and practice their civic duties. This course covers units like:
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[Dig into more specific digital citizenship topics] (id-ela)
Narrow in on some of the digital citizenship topics students care most about with these curated Newsela ELA text sets:
Discover how cyberbullying and empathy are related
Talking to someone from behind a screen makes it easier to forget that there’s a real person with real feelings on the other side. Help students better understand what cyberbullying is and learn how to build empathy for others, even when there’s a screen between them:
Read about how more young people are asking friends and family members for help after getting bullied online.
Discover a student opinion article that discusses the negative effects of bullying in schools.
Explore potential solutions for cyberbullying and what people can do to be more aware and proactive about the problem.
Explore the consequences of AI and cheating
AI is everywhere. But when it’s misused, students can face serious consequences. Help them understand what happens if they use AI for dishonest purposes with the following lesson:
Start by asking students if they’ve known anyone who has used the internet to help them complete a school assignment, what tools they used, and why. Then ask if there were any consequences of using that tool.
Next, assign an opinion article about how AI writing tools like ChatGPT are making it easier for students to cheat with technology.
Extend the lesson by asking students to write an argumentative essay supporting their point of view that AI is either beneficial or harmful to students.
Watch videos about media literacy and digital citizenship
Go beyond texts to help students understand digital citizenship. Choose from interactive videos on topics like:
Digital footprints.
Mass media.
Propaganda.
Online data protection.
Online safety.
Digital citizenship resources for the 2024 election
This year, Digital Citizenship Week also coincides with a presidential election season. This can be a helpful hook to connect your lessons to timely, relevant, real-world events. You can use our Newsela Social Studies resources to help tie these two topics together:
Download our election resources guide that outlines relevant content and text sets for various election and digital citizenship topics and gives tips on encouraging healthy classroom discussions.
Watch the on-demand playback of our webinar “From the Polls to Pedagogy: Teaching the 2024 Election” for a breakdown of how to use these resources in the classroom.
Download our tip sheet that shares four ways to promote civics and media literacy during this election cycle.
Newsela’s subject products go beyond Digital Citizenship Week
Newsela ELA and Newsela Social Studies provide all the texts, videos, and resources you need to help students learn how to be smart, safe, and respectful online. But these lessons don’t just last one week. You can use them all year to help students make intelligent decisions about the media they consume and how they evaluate online content and behavior.
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