vocabulary
Online privacy: A broad term that usually means the ability to control what information you share about yourself online and who can see and share it
Personal information: Information that identifies you—for example, your name, street address, phone number, social security number, email address, etc.—is called personal (or sensitive) info. It’s a good idea to make a rule for yourself not to share this kind of information online.
Reputation: The ideas, opinions, impressions, or beliefs that other people have about you—something that you can’t be totally sure about but that you usually want to be positive or good
Lesson 3
Code: A word or phrase, an image (like a logo or emoji) or some other symbol or collection of symbols that represent a certain meaning or message. Sometimes it’s a secret code that only certain people understand; often it’s just a symbol that stands for something almost everybody understands.
Context: Information that surrounds the message or whatever we’re seeing which helps us understand it. Context can include the place where the message is, the time when it appears or who it’s coming from.
Interpret: The way a person understands a message, or the meaning they get from it
Representation: A picture, symbol or description that says a lot about (or expresses a truth about) a thing, a person or a group
Lesson 4
Frame: When you take a photo or video of a landscape, person or object, the frame is what defines the section that the viewer can see. The part you decide to leave outside the frame is what your viewer won’t be able to see.
Lessons 5 and 6
Assumption: Something that you or other people think is true about a person or thing but there is no proof that it’s true
Curate: To decide what to post online—text, photos, sounds, illustrations or videos—and then organize and present it while thinking about what effects it might have on people who see it, or what it might make them think about you
Digital footprint (or digital presence): Your digital footprint is all the information about you that appears online. This can mean anything from photos, audio, videos and texts to “likes” and comments you post on friendsʼ profiles. Just as your footsteps leave prints on the ground while you walk, what you post online leaves a trail too.
Fact: Something that is or can be proven to be true
Opinion: Something you or other people believe about a person or a thing that isn’t necessarily a fact because a belief can’t be proved
Lesson 7
Oversharing: Sharing too much online—usually it means sharing personal information or just too much about yourself in a certain situation or conversation online