I'm a high school teacher developing a new unit on digital citizenship for our freshman seminar, and I'm struggling to make the concepts feel relevant and urgent to teenagers. They understand the basics of not sharing passwords, but I want to delve deeper into topics like evaluating online sources, understanding algorithmic bias, and the long-term consequences of their digital actions. I'm looking for engaging, non-preachy resources or project ideas that go beyond scare tactics and actually empower them to be critical and ethical participants online.
Love the aim. Start with a practical source-check toolkit: a quick CRAAP-style rubric, a mini-scorecard for news articles, and a 5-minute 'spot the red flags' drill using current headlines. Have students defend their judgments to a partner to build skills in evaluating evidence.
Digital footprints activity: over a week, students log visible actions (posting, liking, sharing) and then discuss long-term consequences for privacy and reputation. End with a personal action plan: adjust privacy settings, be more mindful about what they share, and write a 1-page commitment to better online habits.
Algorithmic bias walkthrough: give small groups a mock social feed with biased inputs; ask how the feed would change and what signals might have caused it. Then brainstorm fixes—more diverse training data, transparency, user control—and connect to real-world cases.
Hands-on project: run a 'myth vs fact' newsroom-style exercise where students verify claims in a trending story using credible sources, documenting their steps and sources. Culminate in a short news brief or slide deck that cites evidence.
Podcast or video micro-episodes where students explain a digital citizenship concept in their own words, plus a reflection on why it matters in daily life. Builds communication skills and empathy.
Quick check: how much time do you have per class? Do you want ready-to-use rubrics and templates, or more flexible prompts you can adapt? Also do you have access to guest speakers or library resources to enrich the unit?