9 Results

Students will learn the potential costs and benefits of social media, digital consumption, and our relationship with technology as a society in the three-week lesson. This inquiry based unit of study will answer the following questions:
Essential Question: How can we use science fiction’s ability to predict the future to help humanity?
Supportive Questions 1: What predictions of future development has science fiction accurately made in the past? This can include technology, privacy, medicine, social justice, political, environmental, education, and economic.
Supportive Question 2: What predictions for future development in contemporary science fiction are positive for the future of humanity? What factors need to begin in your lifetime to make these predictions reality?
Supportive Question 3: What predictions for future development in contemporary science fiction are negative for the future of humanity? What factors need to begin in your lifetime to stop these negative outcomes?
- Subject:
- Information Science
- Electronic Technology
- Educational Technology
- Composition and Rhetoric
- Reading Informational Text
- Reading Literature
- Material Type:
- Homework/Assignment
- Lesson
- Reading
- Unit of Study
- Author:
- Morgen Larsen
- Date Added:
- 07/13/2020

This collection of lessons represent adapted and remixed instructional content for teaching media literacy and specifically civic online reasoning through distance learning. These lessons take students through the steps necessary to source online content, verify evidence presented, and corroborate claims with other sources.
The original lesson plans are the work of Stanford History Education Group, licensed under CC 4.0. Please refer to the full text lesson plans at Stanford History Education Group’s, Civic Online Reasoning Curriculum for specifics regarding background, research findings, and additional curriculum for teaching media literacy in the twenty-first century.
- Subject:
- Information Science
- Business and Communication
- Journalism
- Educational Technology
- Reading Informational Text
- Social Science
- Material Type:
- Activity/Lab
- Assessment
- Homework/Assignment
- Interactive
- Lecture Notes
- Lesson Plan
- Author:
- Adrienne Williams
- Heather Galloway
- Morgen Larsen
- Rachel Obenchain
- Stanford History Education Group-Civic Online Reasoning Project
- Date Added:
- 06/08/2020

This social media literacy unit introduces students to foundational skills in analyzing images and social media posts. It also reenforces critical thinking questions that can be applied to various forms of media. This unit was taught to 9th grade students but is easily adaptible to a range of secondary classrooms. It was also taught in conjunction with another unit focused on social media platforms and content.
- Subject:
- Graphic Arts
- Communication
- Marketing
- Electronic Technology
- Composition and Rhetoric
- Reading Informational Text
- Material Type:
- Assessment
- Homework/Assignment
- Lesson Plan
- Reading
- Unit of Study
- Author:
- Shana Ferguson
- Date Added:
- 12/30/2020

This unit engages students in a variety of activities that analyze and reflect on the role of social media in our everyday lives. This includes options for collaborative group work, reading nonfiction articles, a design challenge and presentations to communicate ideas. The unit also includes a formal writing assessment option that aligns with the Common Core State Writing Standards. Activities can be adapted or combined in a variety of ways to support student reflection and analysis. These lessons were piloted in 9th grade English classes but are suitable or a range of secondary students.
- Subject:
- Communication
- Composition and Rhetoric
- Reading Informational Text
- Speaking and Listening
- Material Type:
- Activity/Lab
- Assessment
- Homework/Assignment
- Lesson
- Unit of Study
- Author:
- Shana Ferguson
- Date Added:
- 02/08/2021

This lesson invites students to use multiple forms of media, including their own Instagram accounts, to explore their on-line identities. The lesson culminates in a personal, visual essay. In the essay, students will use their own images as evidence. Then, students will reason about that evidence to compare what they see on their Instagram posts to their “real world” self. Using information from resources explored in class, students will include a discussion of “authenticity” and properly weave in quotes from those resources.
- Subject:
- Educational Technology
- English Language Arts
- Material Type:
- Lesson
- Lesson Plan
- Author:
- Lauren McClanahan
- Date Added:
- 04/06/2021

This interactive lesson helps students understand how companies use algorithms to sort job applicants. It also encourages students to reflect on how digital data mining also can contribute to the hiring process. Students examine resumes and digital data to consider the ways in which our data may open or close opportunities in an increasingly digitized hiring market.
- Subject:
- Computer Science
- Information Science
- Business and Communication
- English Language Arts
- Material Type:
- Lesson
- Author:
- Shana Ferguson
- Date Added:
- 08/19/2019

In this lesson, students will define their dominant roles online, explain the benefits of each type of online role and discuss the responsibilities and risks inherent in each type of online interaction. This lesson is part of a media unit curated at our Digital Citizenship website entitled "Who Am I Online?"
- Subject:
- Communication
- Educational Technology
- Material Type:
- Activity/Lab
- Lesson Plan
- Author:
- Beth Clothier
- Angela Anderson
- Dana John
- John Sadzewicz
- Date Added:
- 06/11/2020