1 / 17

Creating a Positive Digital Footprint (without putting your foot in it!)

Creating a Positive Digital Footprint (without putting your foot in it!). Diana Maliszewski ECOO – October 20, 2011. Teachers, online?. Danger, danger?. OCT Professional Advisory. OCT’s Multi-Media Message. OCT’s Multi-Media Message. Already there!. ECOO’s Response.

tomas
Download Presentation

Creating a Positive Digital Footprint (without putting your foot in it!)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Creating a Positive Digital Footprint(without putting your foot in it!) Diana Maliszewski ECOO – October 20, 2011

  2. Teachers, online?

  3. Danger, danger?

  4. OCT Professional Advisory

  5. OCT’s Multi-Media Message

  6. OCT’s Multi-Media Message

  7. Already there!

  8. ECOO’s Response • ECOO Encourages Responsible Use of Social Media Educational Computing Organization of Ontario Encourages Responsible Use of Social Networking by TeachersFor immediate release18/04/2011 (Toronto) - The Educational Computing Organization of Ontario (ECOO) is encouraging teachers to continue using social mediasuch as Facebook and Twitter in the wake of a professional advisory issued by the Ontario College of Teachers .“The OCT advisory is a timely and valuable resource for educators,” says ECOO President Bill MacKenzie, “but it shouldn’t dissuade teachers from using technology and social media and teaching its appropriate use.”“Since the release of the advisory, our organization has heard from teachers across the province who are very concerned that they should not be using social media tools with their students. We believe this is not the case.”The Ontario College of Teachers issued a Professional Advisory on the Use of Electronic Communication and Social Media to its 230,000 members on April 11, 2011. The advisory provides important guidelines for teachers and administrators on how best to use social networking tools with students.“While the Ontario College of Teachers is correct to remind its membership to be careful when using new powerful communication tools,” says MacKenzie, “the advisoryclearly supports teachers’ responsible use of electronic communication and social media tools such as Facebook and Twitter.”For over 30 years, ECOO has supported and celebrated the effective use of technology in Ontario classrooms through conferences, competitions, newsletters, special interest groups, and affiliation with the International Society for Technology in Education .ECOO believes that students need help learning how to navigate, evaluate, and effectively use technologies safely and appropriately. “Not all students are ‘digital natives’ with the innate ability to navigate these new technologies effortlessly,” says MacKenzie. “Our teachers have a responsibility to lead by example, demonstrating and teaching the appropriate use of technology and social media.”ECOO applauds the College’s recognition of the importance of technology to communicate with and to engage students in today’s world. ECOO believes that the professional advisory is a helpful first step towards encouraging effective and appropriate use of new technologies by teachers.“We welcome the opportunity to engage with the College and teachers in a dialogue on this important issue,” says MacKenzie. “We invite the OCT to work with us to develop helpful resource materials to support use of these powerful tools by Ontario’s teacher to engage our students.”The Educational Computing Organization of Ontario exists to share and disseminate information and to advocate and promote the effective use of computers and associated technologies in the education process.

  9. Digital Footprint, Defined http://dsc.discovery.com/convergence/koppel/interactive/interactive.html Tony Fish – “My Digital Footprint” A Digital Footprint is the data trace or trail left by someone activity in a digital environment. … Digital Footprints are not your digital identity or your passport but it does have strong links to meta data, internet privacy, trust, security, digital reputation, recommendation, CRM, VRM (taken from http://newmedia.wikia.com/wiki/Digital_Footprint) Me? I’m calling my digital identity my footprints, though it might be technically incorrect. Plus, I like the footprint image!

  10. My little mistake

  11. My cautious tactics • Twitter & YouTube • Didn’t join until 2009 • Made an account in 2006 & never used it • Email • Lied about information • Avoided most things requiring email signup • Facebook • Did not use real name • No photos, no tagging, no friending anyone

  12. My change of heart

  13. Guides http://youthprivacy.ca http://www.priv.gc.ca/index_e.cfm http://pipedreams-education.ca/2010/10/11/my-footprints/ http://dougpete.wordpress.com/2011/09/17/dont-do-stupid-things-part-xxiv/

  14. Strategies http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DONtbXwvHbQ http://mzmollyTLsharespace.pbworks.com

  15. Places • Twitter • Personal blogs • Wikis • Personal websites • Official publications (board websites, etc.)

  16. My devil’s advocate

  17. Results Graphic made by Stephen Smith, M. Ed. Student, using Be Funky, after “finding” me to interview based on an online panel I was on

More Related