Congratulations to the 35 faculty members who have become Certified in Internet Safety from the iSafe site. They have completed the entire online course – every chapter of all 6 modules. That means that they can now access the curriculum materials for their classes and have students take the online assessment surveys. What an awesome accomplishment for our faculty!
One of the great things about the iSAFE training site and materials is the online assessment tool. The site has pre- and post- surveys for students to determine their internet habits and to see if these habits change after kids have done the lessons and learned about the issues and dangers. Material is available for a wide range of content on the site, so Internet Safety can be integrated into almost all courses at high school. Are you integrating Cybersecurity, Cyberethics, and Cybersafety into your classes? Should we be teaching internet safety to students? You can still take the training and earn the recertification points. Register for the course in PDMS, to earn points, then register at the iSAFE site and complete the modules.
News Flash (From iSAFE)
Spammer Locked Up
For the first time ever in the U.S. a spammer has been convicted of felony spamming. Jeremy Jaynes was sentenced to nine years in prison under Virginia’s tough new spam law. Jayne’s sister, Jessica DeGroot, was fined $7500 for her involvement in Jayne’s spam operation. According to court papers, Jayne and company repeatedly sent over 10,000 spam messages over a twentyfour hour period—and those were only the ones reported by irate recipients. The Register of Known Spam Operations rated Jaynes as the eighth-most prolific spammer in the world.
Students may think that what they are doing online is harmless or funny and not realize the serious consequences for these actions. Students have recently gotten in trouble with the law in several states for items posted on MySpace or FaceBook. Students need to recognize threats to their safety online and know how to circumvent predators. Students also need to know when their files or their financial information are endangered.
You have taken a giant leap forward in educating yourselves about some of the Internet Safety issues. I encourage you to use the iSAFE materials and do the lessons with students. I am available to help you plan or to teach a lesson with you – just sign up for my time via e-mail and reserve a lab or laptop cart. Please encourage students to STOP, THINK, CLICK in that order when online. What else should we do to promote and encourage online safety and responsibility for our students? Make a comment and share with others what you are doing in your classroom or other related issues. Just click the Comment button below.

2 responses so far ↓
iSafe looks like a good tool to educate about the “dark side” of the Internet. I’m pleased to see that so many have taken the initiative to certify. Is there any cost involved?
There is no cost with iSAFE and once an educator has completed the training there are free lessons to use with classes. There are materials that can be printed and downloaded for all grade levels, activities, movies and games.
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