Search form

Digital Citizenship: Ideas for Instruction

Digital citizenship involves an all-encompassing code of ethics and a set of practices for using technology safely. Good digital citizenship can include everything from avoiding piracy and plagiarism to using proper online etiquette.

U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan underscored the importance of teaching students how to be good digital citizens in an article he penned for Scientific American. “Today's elementary school students will be completing college around 2030,” Duncan wrote. “Their careers will take them deep into the second half of the 21st century. It is a good bet that the economy they enter will rely even more on knowledge and technology than ours does today. Our schools must prepare students for that future, and we had better get it right. Their preparedness will decide our economic strength as a country.”

DigitalCitizenship.net identifies elements that make up the “norms of appropriate, responsible behavior with regard to technology use.” These elements can be grouped into the following three areas of concentration, making it easier to apply the concepts to lessons that already meet the national standards for technology:

Respect Yourself/Respect Others: Etiquette, access and law

Educate Yourself/Connect with Others: Communication, literacy and commerce

Protect Yourself/Protect Others: Rights and responsibility, safety (security), and health and welfare

Below, find EducationWorld’s favorite ideas for working these three digital citizenship themes into the classroom.


1.  “Ctrl C” Means Cheat

Cover the issues of plagiarism and cheating by addressing the category of Respect Yourself/Respect Others. Illustrate how it is both wrong and illegal to copy someone else’s work and pass it off as your own. Use the case of a  principal caught plagiarizing to show that this is not just something done with respect to book reports. Make sure students understand proper citation of Internet sources. Check out this student guide for properly using Wikipedia as an academic resource. Proper use of Wikipedia can give students good practice in evaluating site quality, judging the credibility of online information and properly citing Web sources.


2.  Good Site/Bad Site

Focusing on the elements in the Educate Yourself category, encourage students to visit two different Web sites that feature content on the same subject. Have them study each and note their differences. Do they both cite information sources? Do they both “look right?” Often dubious sites seem good at first glance, but upon further scrutiny, reveal themselves to be poor.

The EducationWorld article Evaluating Online Information explains how students can use the CARS checklist for informational quality. The four components of the CARS checklist are:

  • Credibility: What about this source makes it believable?
  • Accuracy: Is the information provided up-to-date, factual, detailed, exact and comprehensive?
  • Reasonableness: Is the information fair, objective, moderate and consistent?
  • Support: Can the information be corroborated?


3.  Stranger Danger

Educators can touch on the category of Protect Yourself/Protect Others by invoking the tried-and-true lesson of stranger danger. Ask students if they would give their name and phone number to a stranger on the street. Then ask them if they would accept a friend request from someone they didn’t know. These simple questions can open the door to a lively class discussion on applying real-world scenarios to the digital landscape.

Web safety expert Nancy Willard offers this helpful overview of Youth Risk Online. The article Why Teens Make Unsafe Choices Online offers additional points for potential discussion with students.


Related resources

Teaching Digital Citizenship
Promoting Responsible and Ethical Digital Citizens


Article by Jason Tomaszewski, EducationWorld Associate Editor
Education World®         
Copyright © 2013 Education World