This link has been bookmarked by 210 people and liked by 1 people. It was first bookmarked on 22 Aug 2008, by H Below.
-
13 Nov 16
-
12 Oct 16
-
10 May 15
-
But there's no one out in cyberspace to make sure they wash behind their digital ears and refuse cookies from online strangers. Given this potentially dangerous void, schools will increasingly extend their supervisory reach, giving lessons at every grade level on netiquette -- call it Online Manners and Ethics 101.
-
But forward-thinking educators are working to teach all-around netiquette. These nascent rules -- from acceptable-use policies created by school districts to guide students on the Internet to basic manners instructions for students with school email accounts -- have begun to show up in official documents.
-
So what, exactly, is good netiquette? "A lot of it has to do with tone -- how you ask for things," says
-
No "SHOUTING" and avoiding IM-speak in formal messages are among the most common guidelines.
-
-
09 May 15
-
Understanding how to interact online safely and effectively is, and will be, ever more critical. As today's students grow older, they'll be using the Internet to apply to colleges and jobs, and to communicate and network with colleagues. Yet our children, however much they seem to have been born with iPods growing out of their ears, haven't learned to handle digital communications by osmosis, any more than they innately knew how to write a résumé or hold a fork.
-
Educators have been increasingly, and sometimes uncomfortably, aware that students need education not just in Internet tools but also in Internet behavior. Given the more spectacular worries about online predators or identity theft, efforts so far have focused most on safety: Virginia now requires Internet-safety lessons in public schools, and Texas and Illinois have passed laws encouraging them.
-
But forward-thinking educators are working to teach all-around netiquette. These nascent rules -- from acceptable-use policies created by school districts to guide students on the Internet to basic manners instructions for students with school email accounts -- have begun to show up in official documents.
-
-
13 Mar 15
-
But whatever form it takes in the immediate future, netiquette training will -- and must -- expand.
-
-
08 Feb 15
-
07 Feb 15
-
Understanding how to interact online safely and effectively is, and will be, ever more critical. As today's students grow older, they'll be using the Internet to apply to colleges and jobs, and to communicate and network with colleagues. Yet our children, however much they seem to have been born with iPods growing out of their ears, haven't learned to handle digital communications by osmosis, any more than they innately knew how to write a résumé or hold a fork.
-
-
05 Feb 15
-
From email to social networking to classroom blogs, today's students are online, both in and out of school -- a lot.
But there's no one out in cyberspace to make sure they wash behind their digital ears and refuse cookies from online strangers. Given this potentially dangerous void, schools will increasingly extend their supervisory reach, giving lessons at every grade level on netiquette -- call it Online Manners and Ethics 101.
Understanding how to interact online safely and effectively is, and will be, ever more critical. As today's students grow older, they'll be using the Internet to apply to colleges and jobs, and to communicate and network with colleagues. Yet our children, however much they seem to have been born with iPods growing out of their ears, haven't learned to handle digital communications by osmosis, any more than they innately knew how to write a résumé or hold a fork.
-
-
02 Feb 15
-
02 Nov 14
-
11 Aug 14
-
Behaveyourself.com: Online Manners Matter
-
-
09 Aug 14
iphilliumwhy Netiquette maters
education netiquette Vocabulary rules DGL Vocabulary online etiquette definition DGL etiquette manners behaveyourself
-
Given this potentially dangerous void, schools will increasingly extend their supervisory reach, giving lessons at every grade level on netiquette -- call it Online Manners and Ethics 101.
-
Understanding how to interact online safely and effectively is, and will be, ever more critical. As today's students grow older, they'll be using the Internet to apply to colleges and jobs, and to communicate and network with colleagues. Yet our children, however much they seem to have been born with iPods growing out of their ears, haven't learned to handle digital communications by osmosis, any more than they innately knew how to write a résumé or hold a fork.
-
Educators have been increasingly, and sometimes uncomfortably, aware that students need education not just in Internet tools but also in Internet behavior.
-
But forward-thinking educators are working to teach all-around netiquette. These nascent rules -- from acceptable-use policies created by school districts to guide students on the Internet to basic manners instructions for students with school email accounts -- have begun to show up in official documents.
-
Good online communication is especially important in virtual schools, where most interaction happens digitally.
-
-
12 Jul 14
-
- Don't SHOUT in all caps.
- Remember: The person on the other end of a digital communication can't see your expression or hear your tone of voice.
- Cool off before responding to messages in anger.
- Check messages for misspellings or misstatements.
- Respect others' privacy and your own (for example, don't give your number to that new MySpace friend).
- Use a clear and understandable email subject line.
- Adjust your tone and style to the situation (for example, don't use IM-speak or all lowercase letters in an internship application).
- Don't forward private messages to people they weren't intended for or copy others on replies to personal messages.
- Remember: Email is never really private and a copy may exist in cyberspace . . . forever.
Forward-thinking schools make netiquette the student's Internet hall pass. Here are some of the basics:
-
-
-
netiquette -- call it Online Manners and Ethics 101.
-
Understanding how to interact online safely and effectively
-
Given the more spectacular worries about online predators or identity theft, efforts so far have focused most on safety
-
all-around netiquette. These nascent rules -- from acceptable-use policies created by school districts to guide students on the Internet to basic manners instructions for students with school email accounts
-
So what, exactly, is good netiquette? "A lot of it has to do with tone -- how you ask for things,"
-
No "SHOUTING" and avoiding IM-speak in formal messages are among the most common guidelines.
-
-
11 Jul 14
-
Understanding how to interact online safely and effectively is, and will be, ever more critical.
-
students need education not just in Internet tools but also in Internet behavior.
-
Virginia now requires Internet-safety lessons in public schools
-
"And if our students are going to be prepared for the workplace, that's the way they're going to need to be able to communicate."
-
No "SHOUTING" and avoiding IM-speak in formal messages are among the most common guidelines.
-
Good online communication is especially important in virtual schools
-
- Don't SHOUT in all caps.
- Remember: The person on the other end of a digital communication can't see your expression or hear your tone of voice.
-
Cool off before responding to messages in anger.
-
Check messages for misspellings or misstatements.
-
- Respect others' privacy and your own (for example, don't give your number to that new MySpace friend).
- Use a clear and understandable email subject line.
- Adjust your tone and style to the situation (for example, don't use IM-speak or all lowercase letters in an internship application).
- Don't forward private messages to people they weren't intended for or copy others on replies to personal messages.
- Remember: Email is never really private and a copy may exist in cyberspace . . . forever.
-
-
25 Jun 14
Marshelle GodsyBehaveyourself.com: Online Manners Matter | Edutopia
-
24 Jun 14
-
02 Feb 14
-
08 Oct 13
-
30 Sep 13
-
23 Sep 13
-
09 Sep 13
-
From email to social networking to classroom blogs, today's students are online, both in and out of school -- a lot.
But there's no one out in cyberspace to make sure they wash behind their digital ears and refuse cookies from online strangers. Given this potentially dangerous void, schools will increasingly extend their supervisory reach, giving lessons at every grade level on netiquette -- call it Online Manners and Ethics 101.
Understanding how to interact online safely and effectively is, and will be, ever more critical. As today's students grow older, they'll be using the Internet to apply to colleges and jobs, and to communicate and network with colleagues. Yet our children, however much they seem to have been born with iPods growing out of their ears, haven't learned to handle digital communications by osmosis, any more than they innately knew how to write a résumé or hold a fork.
Educators have been increasingly, and sometimes uncomfortably, aware that students need education not just in Internet tools but also in Internet behavior. Given the more spectacular worries about online predators or identity theft, efforts so far have focused most on safety: Virginia (1) now requires Internet-safety lessons in public schools, and Texas (2) and Illinois (3) have passed laws encouraging them.
-
-
07 Sep 13
Beverly YoungThis website speaks on how netiquette is being taught to users young. It also goes into how the digital world will be used by professional to learn about an individual or for an individual will have to apply for jobs in the future. So that being said good etiquette is important
-
Netiquette becomes a key part of education.
-
From email to social networking to classroom blogs, today's students are online, both in and out of school
-
But there's no one out in cyberspace to make sure they wash behind their digital ears and refuse cookies from online strangers. Given this potentially dangerous void, schools will increasingly extend their supervisory reach, giving lessons at every grade level on netiquette
-
Online Manners and Ethics 101.
-
Understanding how to interact online safely and effectively is, and will be, ever more critical
-
Internet to apply to colleges and jobs, and to communicate and network with colleagues.
-
-
29 Jul 13
-
11 Jul 13
-
24 Jun 13
-
13 May 13
-
Educators have been increasingly, and sometimes uncomfortably, aware that students need education not just in Internet tools but also in Internet behavior.
-
-
04 May 13
-
- Don't SHOUT in all caps.
- Remember: The person on the other end of a digital communication can't see your expression or hear your tone of voice.
- Cool off before responding to messages in anger.
- Check messages for misspellings or misstatements.
- Respect others' privacy and your own (for example, don't give your number to that new MySpace friend).
- Use a clear and understandable email subject line.
- Adjust your tone and style to the situation (for example, don't use IM-speak or all lowercase letters in an internship application).
- Don't forward private messages to people they weren't intended for or copy others on replies to personal messages.
- Remember: Email is never really private and a copy may exist in cyberspace . . . forever.
Forward-thinking schools make netiquette the student's Internet hall pass. Here are some of the basics:
-
-
27 Apr 13
-
From email to social networking to classroom blogs, today's students are online, both in and out of school -- a lot.
But there's no one out in cyberspace to make sure they wash behind their digital ears and refuse cookies from online strangers. Given this potentially dangerous void, schools will increasingly extend their supervisory reach, giving lessons at every grade level on netiquette -- call it Online Manners and Ethics 101.
-
From email to social networking to classroom blogs, today's students are online, both in and out of school -- a lot.
But there's no one out in cyberspace to make sure they wash behind their digital ears and refuse cookies from online strangers. Given this potentially dangerous void, schools will increasingly extend their supervisory reach, giving lessons at every grade level on netiquette -- call it Online Manners and Ethics 101.
-
Credit: Wesley Bedrosian
From email to social networking to classroom blogs, today's students are online, both in and out of school -- a lot.
But there's no one out in cyberspace to make sure they wash behind their digital ears and refuse cookies from online strangers. Given this potentially dangerous void, schools will increasingly extend their supervisory reach, giving lessons at every grade level on netiquette -- call it Online Manners and Ethics 101.
Understanding how to interact online safely and effectively is, and will be, ever more critical. As today's students grow older, they'll be using the Internet to apply to colleges and jobs, and to
-
-
29 Mar 13
-
21 Jan 13
Victorye PulliamThis is really an elementary view of Online Etiquette but similar rules apply for everyone when carrying themselves with respect and clear communication
-
there's no one out in cyberspace to make sure they wash behind their digital ears and refuse cookies from online strangers.
-
netiquette -- call it Online Manners and Ethics 101.
-
Educators have been increasingly, and sometimes uncomfortably, aware that students need education not just in Internet tools but also in Internet behavior
-
-
20 Jan 13
-
Behaveyourself.com: Online Manners Matter
-
From email to social networking to classroom blogs, today's students are online, both in and out of school -- a lot.
-
Don't SHOUT in all caps
-
Remember: The person on the other end of a digital communication can't see your expression or hear your tone of voice.
-
Cool off before responding to messages in anger.
-
- Check messages for misspellings or misstatements.
-
Respect others' privacy and your own (for example, don't give your number to that new MySpace friend).
-
se a clear and understandable email subject line.
-
- Adjust your tone and style to the situation (for example, don't use IM-speak or all lowercase letters in an internship application).
- Don't forward private messages to people they were
-
- for or copy others on replies to personal messages.
- Remember: Email is never really private and a copy may exist in cyberspace . . . forever.
-
-
17 Jan 13
-
Educators have been increasingly, and sometimes uncomfortably, aware that students need education not just in Internet tools but also in Internet behavior.
-
Good online communication is especially important in virtual schools, where most interaction happens digitally.
-
Remember: The person on the other end of a digital communication can't see your expression or hear your tone of voice.
-
Remember: The person on the other end of a digital communication can't see your expression or hear your tone of voice.
-
Use a clear and understandable email subject line.
-
-
12 Dec 12
Rhonda Jenkins-GardinierArticle about the importance of teaching "netiquette", online manners, and safety
netiquette digitalcitizenship internetsafety edutopia education
-
25 Nov 12
-
07 Nov 12
-
27 Oct 12
-
21 Oct 12
Sr. Rita KellerDigital Citizenship and Netiquette
netiquette digitalcitizenship internetsafety edutopia education Internet manners behaveyourself
-
-
Understanding how to interact online safely and effectively is, and will be, ever more critical. As today's students grow older, they'll be using the Internet to apply to colleges and jobs, and to communicate and network with colleagues. Yet our children, however much they seem to have been born with iPods growing out of their ears, haven't learned to handle digital communications by osmosis, any more than they innately knew how to write a résumé or hold a fork.
-
- Don't SHOUT in all caps.
- Remember: The person on the other end of a digital communication can't see your expression or hear your tone of voice.
- Cool off before responding to messages in anger.
- Check messages for misspellings or misstatements.
- Respect others' privacy and your own (for example, don't give your number to that new MySpace friend).
- Use a clear and understandable email subject line.
- Adjust your tone and style to the situation (for example, don't use IM-speak or all lowercase letters in an internship application).
- Don't forward private messages to people they weren't intended for or copy others on replies to personal messages.
- Remember: Email is never really private and a copy may exist in cyberspace . . . forever.
Don't Even Think About It: The Basics of Netiquette
Forward-thinking schools make netiquette the student's Internet hall pass. Here are some of the basics:
Read more detailed guidelines (8) from teachers, schools, and school districts.
-- LW
-
-
08 Oct 12
-
07 Oct 12
-
01 Oct 12
-
Understanding how to interact online safely and effectively is, and will be, ever more critical. As today's students grow older, they'll be using the Internet to apply to colleges and jobs, and to communicate and network with colleagues. Yet our children, however much they seem to have been born with iPods growing out of their ears, haven't learned to handle digital communications by osmosis, any more than they innately knew how to write a résumé or hold a fork.
-
Educators have been increasingly, and sometimes uncomfortably, aware that students need education not just in Internet tools but also in Internet behavior. Given the more spectacular worries about online predators or identity theft, efforts so far have focused most on safety: Virginia (1) now requires Internet-safety lessons in public schools, and Texas (2) and Illinois (3) have passed laws encouraging them.
-
-
16 Sep 12
Stephanie Mullalyinternet safety need sot be taught in schools, but so does being polite on the internet ~ netiquette.
A nice list of dos and don;ts at the end of article-
our children, however much they seem to have been born with iPods growing out of their ears, haven't learned to handle digital communications by osmosis,
-
Educators have been increasingly, and sometimes uncomfortably, aware that students need education not just in Internet tools but also in Internet behavior.
-
Basics of Netiquette
-
-
12 Sep 12
KATIE BAIRD"netiquette"--Online etiquette in the digital age.
-
Given this potentially dangerous void, schools will increasingly extend their supervisory reach
-
Understanding how to interact online safely and effectively is, and will be, ever more critical
-
But forward-thinking educators are working to teach all-around netiquette
-
Good online communication is especially important in virtual schools, where most interaction happens digitally
-
-
02 Jul 12
-
28 Jun 12
-
Don't Even Think About It: The Basics of Netiquet
-
-
Don't Even Think About It: The Basics of Netiquet
-
asics of Netiquet
-
-
09 Jun 12
-
24 May 12
-
04 May 12
Diana Irene SaldanaFrom email to social networking to classroom blogs, today's students are online, both in and out of school -- a lot.
netiquette digital citizenship internet safety digcitwebinar digital citizenship
-
29 Apr 12
-
24 Apr 12
-
10 Apr 12
-
23 Mar 12
-
10 Mar 12
-
27 Feb 12
-
20 Feb 12
-
14 Feb 12
-
24 Jan 12
-
12 Jan 12
-
16 Dec 11
-
11 Dec 11
-
21 Oct 11
-
21 Sep 11
Evonne ParkerOnline communications within and outside of school.
facebook twitter netiquette internetsafety education manners Internet
-
25 Aug 11
-
all-around netiquette. These nascent rules -- from acceptable-use policies created by school districts to guide students on the Internet to basic manners instructions for students with school email accounts -
-
schools must incorporate netiquette better into everyday education. "Rather than having it be, 'We're all going to troop down to the computer lab and learn Internet matters,' embed it into the regular classroom experience," Evans argues. "When we're using collaborative tools in the classroom, instruct right along with them."
-
-
13 Jul 11
-
25 Jun 11
-
22 Jun 11
-
predators or identity theft, efforts so far have focused most on safety
-
These nascent rules -- from acceptable-use policies created by school districts to guide students on the Internet to basic manners instructions for students with school email accounts -- have begun to show up in official documents.
-
tone -- how you ask for things
-
No "SHOUTING" and avoiding IM-speak
-
embed it into the regular classroom experience," Evans argues. "When we're using collaborative tools in the classroom, instruct right along with them."
-
-
21 Jun 11
-
26 May 11
-
04 May 11
-
- Don't SHOUT in all caps.
- Remember: The person on the other end of a digital communication can't see your expression or hear your tone of voice.
- Cool off before responding to messages in anger.
- Check messages for misspellings or misstatements.
- Respect others' privacy and your own (for example, don't give your number to that new MySpace friend).
- Use a clear and understandable email subject line.
- Adjust your tone and style to the situation (for example, don't use IM-speak or all lowercase letters in an internship application).
- Don't forward private messages to people they weren't intended for or copy others on replies to personal messages.
- Remember: Email is never really private and a copy may exist in cyberspace . . . forever.
-
-
08 Apr 11
-
04 Apr 11
-
02 Apr 11
-
13 Mar 11
-
10 Mar 11
Lori ListerEdutopia article touching on netiquette and a list of basic rules.
netiquette digitalcitizenship internetsafety manners Internet
-
Understanding how to interact online safely and effectively is, and will be, ever more critical.
-
our children, however much they seem to have been born with iPods growing out of their ears, haven't learned to handle digital communications by osmosis
-
-
When we're using collaborative tools in the classroom, instruct right along with them."
-
-
03 Mar 11
-
07 Feb 11
-
05 Feb 11
-
Given this potentially dangerous void, schools will increasingly extend their supervisory reach, giving lessons at every grade level on netiquette -- call it Online Manners and Ethics 10
-
-
-
03 Feb 11
-
Jennifer MagilArticle about netiquette, few basic statements about how to use netiquette
-
-
can't see your expressio
-
misspellings or misstatements.
-
on't forward private messages to people they weren't intended
-
-
02 Feb 11
-
Given this potentially dangerous void, schools will increasingly extend their supervisory reach, giving lessons at every grade level on netiquette
-
A lot of it has to do with tone -- how you ask for things,"
-
No "SHOUTING" and avoiding IM-speak in formal messages are among the most common guidelines
-
"A lot of schools are beginning to put in Internet-safety and Internet-etiquette units," he says. "But they're not systemic in any way, and they really need to be."
-
-
01 Feb 11
-
18 Jan 11
-
08 Dec 10
-
08 Nov 10
-
31 Oct 10
-
"There are people who are realizing that online communication is the wave of the future," says Don Knezek, CEO of the International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE). "And if our students are going to be prepared for the workplace, that's the way they're going to need to be able to communicate."
-
"There are people who are realizing that online communication is the wave of the future," says Don Knezek, CEO of the International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE). "And if our students are going to be prepared for the workplace, that's the way they're going to need to be able to communicate."
-
Don't Even Think About It: The Basics of Netiquette
-
-
26 Oct 10
Page Comments
Would you like to comment?
Join Diigo for a free account, or sign in if you are already a member.