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Digital Citizenship Digital Do’s and Don’ts. Do’s and Don’ts 1.“Friend” learners on Facebook or SN sites 2.“Friend” colleagues on Facebook or SN sites.

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Presentation on theme: "Digital Citizenship Digital Do’s and Don’ts. Do’s and Don’ts 1.“Friend” learners on Facebook or SN sites 2.“Friend” colleagues on Facebook or SN sites."— Presentation transcript:

1 Digital Citizenship Digital Do’s and Don’ts

2 Do’s and Don’ts 1.“Friend” learners on Facebook or SN sites 2.“Friend” colleagues on Facebook or SN sites 3.Share email address with learners 4.Set up accounts for vulnerable people 5.Forward photos to friends or learners 6.Check-in your location on-line 7.Disclose a password or log-in 8.Share personal information 07525770552 TXT: Digi-DONT. Your Name. Your Don’ts

3 What’s not good practice 07525770552 TXT: Digi-DONT. Your Name. Your Don’ts

4 Navigate the Digital Landscape Adults? ICT – Download – Consume – Corporate – Separate media – Static Young people? Web 2-3 – Uploading – Creating and collaborating – Personalising – Converged media – Interacting communities – Responsive: QR codes, GPS locations

5 eResponsibility In the post-16 sector online safety must be a two-way process  Learners need digital values to protect themselves and each other online  Staff need the skills to protect their learners and guidance for their own professional reputation  Organisations must re-assess the real risks to their own staff and learners through consultation  Legal requirements and professional standards apply and must be evidenced and monitored Go to View > Header & Footer to edit October 17, 2015 | slide 5 - eResponsibility

6 Digital Values Protecting yourself and others online Strong passwords and security awareness Cautious information sharing – everyone’sinformation sharing everyone’s Respect for yourself protect your profile Respect for yourself Respect for others in online communities Ownership – copyright and referencingcopyright Care with web forms txt messages and emailsweb forms emails Facebook for educators Go to View > Header & Footer to edit October 17, 2015 | slide 6

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8 Learn how to recognise phishing and phoney emails – Check email addresses are valid, Use email accounts cleverly and don’t ‘post’ them for web-bots email@*SPAM*juliataylor.com email@~deletethis~juliataylor.com email[at] juliataylor [dot] com

9 Another bogus email..

10 Phishing email This email address is a genuine email address of HMRC but it does NOT mean it was from them… this is a clever disguise Did you even make a tax return recently? I didn’t when I received this email. If you’re not sure – ring them. http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/security/examples.htm This is the biggest danger of this email… the attached webpage will ask for your personal details and will submit them to someone other than the real HMRC

11 eSafety Induction Social Networking Email Chatrooms and IM Cyberbullying Mobile phones

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13 Digital Identity

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16 Go to View > Header & Footer to edit October 17, 2015 | slide 16

17 Julia Taylor JISC RSC SW juliataylor@rsc-south-west.ac.uk E-safety NING group http://jisc-rscsw.ning.com/group/esafety 07758778962 eResponsibility


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