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Grand Rapids Parent University

July 7, 2020

Digital Learning

Are you struggling to academically support your child?

Click the icons below to view the Family Guide for each grade level.

Grade+K.jpgGrade+1.jpgGrade%252B2.jpggrade+3.jpggrade+4.jpggrade+5.jpg
These academic guides will make it just a little easier by providing information on the most important things students should be learning, how you can reinforce learning with everyday activities, tips for talking to teachers and online resources that match the most important content of the grade. These guides are meant for everyone— no matter what school looks like for your family this year and where it’s happening.

After review and feedback from parents, educators, and partners (thanks to everyone who commented!) the K-5 guides in English are final. Please share the guides with family, friends, neighbors, and organizations you belong to and/or work with!

Digital literacy is part of media literacy. They’re both included in the idea of “information literacy,” which is the ability to effectively find, identify, evaluate, and use information. Digital literacy specifically applies to media from the internet, smartphones, video games, and other nontraditional sources. Just as media literacy includes the ability to identify media and its messages and create media responsibly, digital literacy includes both nuts-and-bolts skills and ethical obligations.

Here are some key digital-literacy skills kids can learn at home and at school:

  • Searching effectively. From researching a school report to watching the latest music video, kids need to learn how to evaluate the quality, credibility, and validity of media and to give proper credit to the source.
  • Protecting their and others’ private information online. With so many ways to share information, kids need to learn internet safety basics, such as creating strong passwords, using privacy settings, and respecting their friends’ privacy.
  • Giving proper credit when using other people’s work. In a world where anything can be copied, pasted, and even claimed as one’s own, it’s critical that kids learn to correctly cite sources.
  • Understanding digital footprints. What makes digital media so cool — the ability to interact — also creates tiny tracks across the web. Kids need to know that whenever they create a profile, post something, or comment on something, they’re creating a composite profile potentially viewable by others.
  • Respecting each other’s ideas and opinions. To be digitally literate, kids must understand that what makes the web an amazing place is that for this vast virtual world to function properly, we must all be good digital citizens.

Microsoft Digital Literacy Course

What is digital literacy?, Common Sense Media, 2020, www.commonsensemedia.org/news-and-media-literacy/what-is-digital-literacy.

 

Article by Jamie Masco / Educational trend, Online, School Feature / http://achsilc.weebly.com/blog/only-you-can-prevent-plagiarism

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