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YOUNG PEOPLE IN THE VIRTUAL WORLD
PEDAGOGICAL APPROACHES and ACTIVITIES
Web 2.0 is a shorthand term for aspects of the Internet that facilitate interaction and user-generated content (such as mobile phone applications).
This unit can be taught using resources you can find online, such as a rights-free videos about the Internet and its expanding features and impact society. Alternatively, you can prepare a short PowerPoint presentation on Web 2.0. It should include as many of the key elements of the virtual world as possible. Organize discussions in small groups about these key elements. Ask each group to prepare and deliver a short presentation on the benefits
of Web 2.0.
of education practice or policy. This task should be allocated enough time for sufficient engagement, (e.g. over the course of a term). Tutors and trainees should develop criteria for assessing the wiki’s effectiveness, appropriateness and impact participating trainees
Ask teachers (in small groups or individually) to prepare a short lesson related to their subject area, integrating use of the Internet into the lesson. The lesson should demonstrate not only how the objectives of the lesson can be achieved through use of the Internet, but also how the teacher can motivate the students in this way
in your country or region that relates to use of the Internet and young people – the right to information, free expression, protection of minors, and the role of parents, governments and civil society. Discuss these issues individually and then consider how they are related. Do freedom of expression and the right of access to information conflict with protection? Are they both necessary? Should freedom of expression and the right access to information be sacrificed for protection? Why or why not? Should girls and boys have equal access to information, the Internet and new technologies?
What is happening in your region? How can this be addressed? Ask teachers to prepare
a short poem on certain freedoms and rights and the need to protect minors