Assessment 2 Part B Critical Reflection Blog Post

Prior to participating in the course learning, I did not have a full understanding of what digital citizenship is or what it looks like in an elementary school system. I understood that digital citizenship did not get the attention or the focus of the other 6 C’s – collaboration, creativity, communication, critical thinking, character, and digital citizenship. I noticed over that digital citizenship resources were lacking in the school board and educators, including myself, did not truly understand digital citizenship. I am now confident that I understand digital citizenship practices and the next steps that are required to improve digital citizenship at the school board.

As the Technology Enabled Learning Teacher Contact for the school board, I am considered the leader who promotes the effective integration of technology into the classroom. Over the last three months, I have made great strides to create digital citizenship awareness among educators and students. During Catholic Education Week, I facilitated a Digital Citizenship poster contest connected to the Catholic Graduate Expectations. Students were asked to select one of the Catholic Graduate Expectations and interpret what that looked like as a Digital Citizen. Students also practiced their digital literacy skills that posters were completed using digital tools.

The week of May 24 – 28 was deemed Digital Literacy Awareness Week. To promote digital literacy skills across the school board I created a choice board that promotes digital citizenship resources and games. A live Youtube event was held May 20 with Cobblestone Collective to promote students promoting the skills they have within the Digital Learning Environment (DLE). Parents were invited to attend the event with their students to learn how to create a video tutorial. Students were challenged to create their own video tutorials to share with their parents and teachers about the favourite tool they use in Google. The video and slide deck is will be shared with teachers to share and promote in their classrooms the week of May 24 – 28th.

Another step forward was obtaining approval to purchase a collection of primary and junior books to be kept in each school’s library. As I was conducting research for both course assessments I learned that there are not many digital citizenship resources available for the primary division. I was able to collate a list of 15 picture books that support educators integrating digital citizenship practices into the primary classroom.

Where do I go from here, what is next and how do I continue to move forward promoting digital citizenship across the system. One large project that I will be undertaking is creating a digital citizenship course within D2L Brightspace, Ontario’s Virtual Learning Environment. I would like to develop a course that enrolls all educators within the school board will be enrolled as students. The course will include information about school board policies and procedures, teaching resources, digital citizenship lessons, best practices for digital citizenship, ministry resources, Catholic Graduate Expectations, and professional development opportunities. The course will appear on the SNCDSB Hub landing page. The benefits of developing the course will include teachers learning more about digital citizenship practices but it will also positively impact their ability to navigate with the VLE. Currently, the VLE is only used as a landing page and a curation tool for resources and digital artifacts of learning. Educators will experience firsthand the functionality and features of the VLE.

In my first blog post for the course, I indicated that I would become more active on Twitter to actively participate rather than solely being a consumer. I have increased the number of posts I have noticed an increase in participation with educators across the school board as well. I have begun to feel a sense of community through Twitter as my Professional Learning Network.

Finally, I will advocate for a dedicated professional development day for educators, centered on technology integration, digital citizenship, and digital literacy skills. I will work closely with the leads within the school board who have do have dedicated professional development days to collaborate about how I can work with teachers, offering technology integration sessions.

 

Module 1 What is Digital Citizenship?

A Digital Learning Environment is a classroom that is interactive, digital and accessible through a technology device and internet connection. The school board I work with uses Google Classroom and D2L’s Brightspace as a digital learning environment. Educators will synchronously meet with students through the Google Meet link in Google Classroom. Students are able to post questions on the Stream or some educators have integrated a Google Hangout as a discussion space for classroom participants. Within Google, Classroom educators are able to post assignments, provide feedback and keep their mark book. Students are able to communicate with their classroom teacher and submit their assignments.

D2L’s Brightspace is slowly being adopted within the school board as it is Ontario’s VLE. Currently, the expectation is that students upload their very best work to their digital portfolios. The tool organizes students’ work by offering filters and tagging system. Each year student’s classrooms with be populated so students can visit the previous year’s work to reflect on their growths and achievements throughout their learning journey. The tool currently meets the needs of students having a digital portfolio that can be shared with parents/guardians through student lead conferences and offer digital artifacts for reflection and consolidation of learning.

I am excited about the learning in this course, as I lack the confidence to provide guidance to educators and students on the board about what it means to practice digital citizenship. I have a general idea of a digital footprint, copyright infringement, however, I am looking forward to learning more about privacy and data storage best practices. According to Greenhow (2010), students require the following technology-based skills: technology fluency, innovation, communication and collaboration, research and information fluency, problem-solving and digital citizenship. Digital citizenship is beyond online safety but involves participatory digital communication.

As a 21st century educator, I created a Twitter account. I post my work, activities, workshops, and learnings that I have. I find it inspiring to learn from other educators using the tool. I have also met and had interactions with educators that I may not have otherwise had the pleasure of meeting through the social media platform. I use my Twitter account exclusively for professional use posting my work and sharing information with educators.

References
Greenhow, C. (2010). New concept of citizenship for the digital age. Learning & Leading with Technology, 37(6), 24-25.