In a world shaped by digital transformation, the Digital Citizenship Education Planner offers a practical and forward-looking framework to equip learners and educators with the competences needed for responsible, meaningful and democratic engagement online.
The Digital Citizenship Education Planner (DCE Planner) is an essential tool for empowering young citizens in the digital era. It aims at creating an agreed vision of digital competences citizens need for constructive, responsible and meaningful engagement with digital technologies. The DCE Planner is a dynamic tool with the flexibility to meet the needs of a variety of educational professionals – teachers, school leaders, teacher educators, administrators, non-formal education actors and policy makers. Its accessible language and simple structure enable teachers to create meaningful learning experiences for students. School leaders can draw on it to decide school priorities. Teacher educators can use it to plan professional development, and administrators to monitor educational outcomes. Civil society actors can refer to the DCE Planner when designing training of trainers or other capacity development activities.
Policy makers can look to it for direction on addressing current educational challenges arising from the way digitalisation is affecting society, human rights and democracy. The DCE Planner is a multi-purpose tool serving as a companion to explain digital citizenship and to map a variety of
aspects of digital competences.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS FOREWORD INTRODUCTION CHAPTER 1 – BACKGROUND AND CONCEPT
Background
The concept of digital citizenship education
The origin of the DCE Planner
CHAPTER 2 – THE NEED FOR A COMMON FRAMEWORK
Why the DCE Planner was created
The challenges
Meeting the challenges
Naming the new tool
CHAPTER 3 – THE DCE PLANNER DESIGN
Values and principles
Outcomes, domains, themes and age groups
CHAPTER 4 – A SOURCE OF IDEAS AND INSPIRATION
Using the DCE Planner
Getting started
Practical scenarios
Conclusion
DCE PLANNER LEARNING OUTCOMES
Access and Inclusion
Learning and Creativity
Media and Information Literacy
Ethics and Empathy
Health and Well-being
e-Presence and Communications
Active Participation
Rights and Responsibilities
Privacy and Security
Consumer Awareness
LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS REFERENCES