Post by sitomo101 on Mar 11, 2024 2:52:48 GMT -5
In emerging nations, the diffusion of new technologies has been rapid, but asymmetrical. And phenomena such as cyberbullying and the exploitation of minors' images have grown . children's rights; children; Internet; children's digital rights; Italian schools Child with tablet Digital rights: what the UN Convention establishes Article 17 of the UN Convention states that “Every child has the right to receive information from all over the world, through the media (radio, newspapers, television) and to be protected from harmful materials and information”. Today this rule is translated into the right "to receive, create and share content from and with the whole world through the Internet and other media and to be protected from the dangers that lurk on.
A revision that puts children at the center and should be Oman Phone Number Data understood by everyone. But what happens in reality? According to the WeWorld report , despite improvements in infrastructure, 4.9% of Italian families do not have ADSL coverage . The digital divide depends on generational and cultural factors. The most connected families are those who are more educated and have children. The least connected are those made up of the elderly and the poorest. At school with DAD What did the year 2020/2021 represent for Italian schools? A difficult parenthesis to start everything again as before? An opportunity for renewal? The last station of an unstoppable crisis that has only found a way to explode? According to a Unicef study , published in February, the pandemic has highlighted educational inequalities, but not only.
The teachers, in most cases, continued to carry out frontal lessons and only 14.5% of them moved on to laboratory teaching which involves and empowers the children. The Community of Sant'Egidio confirms that, currently, one in four minors is at risk of dropping out of school. And there are few teachers who know how to attract attention through technological means. children's rights; Internet access; children; school; training; class; Italian schools A teacher uses the IWB An example is provided by the introduction of the IWB, the new interactive multimedia whiteboard, into the classroom . On this screen you can write, draw, attach images, play videos or animations.
A revision that puts children at the center and should be Oman Phone Number Data understood by everyone. But what happens in reality? According to the WeWorld report , despite improvements in infrastructure, 4.9% of Italian families do not have ADSL coverage . The digital divide depends on generational and cultural factors. The most connected families are those who are more educated and have children. The least connected are those made up of the elderly and the poorest. At school with DAD What did the year 2020/2021 represent for Italian schools? A difficult parenthesis to start everything again as before? An opportunity for renewal? The last station of an unstoppable crisis that has only found a way to explode? According to a Unicef study , published in February, the pandemic has highlighted educational inequalities, but not only.
The teachers, in most cases, continued to carry out frontal lessons and only 14.5% of them moved on to laboratory teaching which involves and empowers the children. The Community of Sant'Egidio confirms that, currently, one in four minors is at risk of dropping out of school. And there are few teachers who know how to attract attention through technological means. children's rights; Internet access; children; school; training; class; Italian schools A teacher uses the IWB An example is provided by the introduction of the IWB, the new interactive multimedia whiteboard, into the classroom . On this screen you can write, draw, attach images, play videos or animations.