Electronic communication facilitates positive interactions, such as sharing ideas with many people, but the public and anonymous nature of electronic communication also allows intimidating and inappropriate behavior in the form of cyberbullying. Responsible electronic communication includes limiting access to personably identifiable information. Students learn and use appropriate behavior when communicating electronically (often called "netiquette"). For example, students could share their work on a classroom blog or in other collaborative spaces online, taking care to avoid sharing information that is inappropriate or that could personally identify themselves to others. (CA CCSS for ELA/Literacy W.K.6, W.1.6, W.21.6) Alternatively, students could provide feedback to others on their work in a kind and respectful manner. They could learn how written words can be easily misinterpreted and may seem negative when the intention may be to express confusion, give ideas, or prompt further discussion. They could also learn to identify harmful behavior on collaborative spaces and intervening to find the proper authority to help. (CA CCSS for ELA/Literacy W.K.5, W.1.5, W.2.5) (HSS 1.1.2)
Standard detail
Depth 2Parent ID: 245C006AB8614920BDE11135BC54EFCAStandard set: Level 1A: Grades K-2 (Ages 5-7)
Original statement
Quick facts
- Statement code
- Standard ID
- 38EBC4A69FF54223B63C59D86AA51D63
- Subject
- Computer Science
- Grades
- K, 01, 02
- Ancestor IDs
- 245C006AB8614920BDE11135BC54EFCAFD0E2D99822E419D9C497AF725B625AF
- Source document
- CSTA K-12 Computer Science Standards (Revised 2017)
- License
- CC BY 4.0 US