Educators do this by following the curriculum from providers like Common Sense Education, Google’s “Be Internet Awesome,” and EverFi’s “Ignition.”
I asked a group of Common Sense Educators which
sites they recommend for parents.
Below are the resources they suggested schools can share to support parents in keeping their children safe online.
5 Digital Citizenship Resources for Parents
1) Common
Sense Widget for Families
Want live, updated information regarding digital
citizenship on your website? You can give parents easy access to advice on
parenting in the digital age by adding the Common Classroom blog for educators
and the Making Sense blog for families to your school’s or district’s site.
Produced in partnership with Digital
Awareness UK this video series is
designed to help parents keep their children safe online. It consists of six
short films for parents, six matching films for children as well as
downloadable online safety fact sheets. The resources are designed to encourage
and support open discussions in families about how to enjoy the online
environment while staying safe.
Practical advice for parents from NetSmartz on
some common sense ideas for keeping kids safe online.
4) Online Safety for Families
Wired Safety provides advice for keeping young
people safe online at various ages from age 8 and under through the teenage
years.
5) District Guidelines and Responsibilities
New York City schools created guidelines and
outlined responsible internet use with students, staff and families which you
can view at the links below.
- Social Media Guidelines - NYC
These are the student guidelines schools share with parents. There are also guides for parents, infographics, and an activity book that go along with the guidelines. - Digital Citizenship Responsibilities - NYC
New York City Schools educators created plain language guidance to advice for supporting good digital citizenship with students and infographics to accompany this advice.
Your Turn
What do you think? What has your experience been with supporting parents in being safe online? Are these resources you feel
would be helpful for the families of your students? Have you tried any of these resources? What did you think? Anything missing?
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