Employers, colleges, and scholarship organizations are scouring the internet to get a sense of our students--what will they find? As educators we have a moral imperative to educate, initiate, and establish the positive web presence of our students. Primarily for the teachers who are not as tech savvy as they wish they were, you will be ready to begin the process next week and have students develop their positive web citizenship by the end of the month.
3. In 2013, 48% of
employers performed
internet searches on all
applicants.
Career Builder Survey,
2013
What do your digital
footprints tell us about
who you are and what
kind of employee you will
be?
4. In 2013, 31% of colleges
performed internet
searches on all
applicants—an all-time
high
Kaplan, 2013
What do your digital
footprints tell us about
who you are and what
kind of student you will
be?
5. Percent of applicants
with negative search
results, impacting
acceptance:
2013—30%
2012—35%
Kaplan, 2013
Students, now that you
know we are watching
you, are you changing
your online behavior?
6. Untagging photos
Changing user names on social network sites
Deletion of social media accounts
Increased privacy settings
The focus is on destruction, deletion, and
avoidance, rather than attempting to
build a positive digital citizenship.
Student Solutions:
7. Can I get more
information or
training on this?
8. A successful candidate
has built a brand—a
brand that is that
person’s repertoire of
skills, interests, and
positive interactions
with peers.
What colleges and employers want to find…
10. Teachers are essential in the process of preparing students for the
21st century.
• Students should be able to move between a wide variety of
media forms, gleaning information, ideas, and an understanding
of arguments.
• Students should be able to express themselves in a wide variety
of media forms, communicating information, ideas, and clearly
reasoned arguments.
Building Transliteracy
11. Our digital moral imperative…
It is our job, not only to warn and
guide students about the proper
use of the internet, but to assist
them in establishing their
individual, positive digital
citizenship.
12. We need to assist
students in creating a
distinct digital citizenship
that is scholarly and
professional; one that is
truly reflective of the best
aspects of each student.
The world is watching.
Stake a claim in your
skills, abilities, and
character.
13. Best place to start
Have students create an email address, preferably gmail,
that reflects who they are—not
snickersbaby98@gmail.com, but
gabriella.a.espinoza@gmail.com .
Have students perform all professional correspondence
with teachers, schools, scholarship organizations, civic
associations, employers, etc., using that address—keep
the address clean.
14. POST:
Posts under this
identity should revolve
around scholarly
activities or interests.
CREATE:
Have students create a
distinctly professional
web presence.
COMMENT:
Comment on the
professional sites of
peers and experts in
field students are
interested in.
15. Linkedin:
Twitter:
Google+:
d
Follow colleges and leaders in the
field that students are interested in—
post content and link relevant sites
Establish a professional profile of
scholarly interests and connect to
experts and other like-minded people
Google+ adds Facebook-like elements
and additional features to increase a
students SEO (Search Engine
Optimization)
Stage One: A Soft Start
16. Google Sites:
Blogger:
d
Have students create blog entries on
topics related to class—use it as the
medium for significant assignments
The easiest way to have students
create webpages and professional
content—consider creating online
portfolios utilizing google sites. As
you build, have students include
images, audio, video, and even
podcasts that exemplify the scholarly
pursuits of your students.
Stage Two: Let’s Build
17. Kidblog.org:
d
No email address, no outside access,
but a place to practice digital
creativity, collaboration,
communication, and critical thinking
Paving the way for
younger students…
Epals.com:
d
Connect your classroom to the world,
practice 21st-century learning, and
celebrate global citizenship, as
students discover themselves as well.
19. A word of caution..
• All content must be informational, professional,
or academic—not personal.
• All interactions must remain objective and
professional.
• The focus is on topics and issues, not people.