Lesson Overview
Students will learn how social networks can be leveraged to promote advocacy efforts. Students will also learn how to develop online content to spread information about a cause of interest.
Students will learn how social networks can be leveraged to promote advocacy efforts. Students will also learn how to develop online content to spread information about a cause of interest.
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Begin Lesson
There is a famous phrase that says, “It isn’t what you know. It is who you know.” While this isn’t 100% accurate (what you know is also incredibly important!), it is a helpful reminder of the importance of networks.
Whether you are looking for a job or trying to play sports at the next level, having a good network can allow you to make contacts who can help you achieve your goals. Advocacy efforts are no different. The bigger and better the network of people we know, the easier it will be to create change in our communities.
From our family members and friends to our teachers and community leaders, we already know more people than we think, especially when we include friends of friends and extend our network beyond those closest to us. These individuals can be great resources for reaching our goals.
There are many people we might not know yet who can help us achieve our goals. Social media and the internet more broadly present other ways of meeting the kinds of individuals who might contribute skills or resources to our advocacy efforts.
On a projection screen at the front of the room, show a video example aligned with your/students’ local/regional context to showcase how people are connected through social networks and how we can benefit from these connections.
In the following activity, you will create a shareable online resource that describes the cause that you care about.
By sharing your advocacy efforts online, you can tell others about what you care about and potentially meet new people who may be able to assist your efforts!
Create a shareable online resource (e.g., using Google Docs, a social media platform, a WordPress blog, a website on Neocities, a slide presentation using Scratch) about an issue you care about, where you will: Write an introduction explaining the cause and why you believe it’s important.
Give students 30 minutes to complete the activity. Depending on the time allotted, in the current or the second group convening, ask students to share their resources with the larger group and have a 15-minute discussion highlighting effective strategies.
Congrats!
You've finished the lesson.
Students will learn about the concept of advocacy by identifying an issue that affects their community and brainstorming two changes that they want to see in the future concerning that problem.
View PageStudents will learn how social networks can be leveraged to promote advocacy efforts. Students will also learn how to develop online content to spread information about a cause of interest.
View PageStudents will learn about and identify ways in which various types of media can be used to promote awareness around an issue.
View PageStudents will learn how hashtags have been effective in promoting social movements.
View PageStudents will learn how to develop an initial plan for their own advocacy campaign.
View PageStudents will be able to sort a list of values in order of importance and reflect on how the most important values impact their lives and their future plans.
View PageStudents will better understand others’ perspectives and feelings in the context of individuals sharing personal information online.
View PageStudents will explore qualities that constitute healthy and kind relationships and how online behaviors play a role in both healthy and unhealthy relationships.
View PageStudents will learn what information verification is and why it is important.
View PageStudents will learn about a five-step checklist they can use to verify the origin, source, date, location, and objective of a news image or video.
View PageStudents will imagine and write about their lives 10-20 years from now.
View PageStudents will define what a scrape (a copy from an original) is and explain why this can make the verification process more difficult.
View PageStudents will better understand others’ perspectives and feelings in the context of individuals sharing personal information online.
View PageStudents will explore qualities that constitute healthy and kind relationships and how online behaviors play a role in both healthy and unhealthy relationships.
View PageStudents will learn what information verification is and why it is important.
View PageStudents will learn about a five-step checklist they can use to verify the origin, source, date, location, and objective of a news image or video.
View PageStudents will imagine and write about their lives 10-20 years from now.
View PageStudents will define what a scrape (a copy from an original) is and explain why this can make the verification process more difficult.
View PageStudents will learn about the concept of advocacy by identifying an issue that affects their community and brainstorming two changes that they want to see in the future concerning that problem.
View PageStudents will learn how social networks can be leveraged to promote advocacy efforts. Students will also learn how to develop online content to spread information about a cause of interest.
View PageStudents will learn about and identify ways in which various types of media can be used to promote awareness around an issue.
View PageStudents will learn how hashtags have been effective in promoting social movements.
View PageStudents will learn how to develop an initial plan for their own advocacy campaign.
View PageStudents will be able to sort a list of values in order of importance and reflect on how the most important values impact their lives and their future plans.
View Page