Your Riverside Digital Portfolio

Welcome to your Digital Portfolio at Riverside Secondary. Riverside provides a unique and innovative digital culture for all of their students to learn in. We are a 1:1 school which means each and every student and staff member uses a device to enhance teaching and learning, and most importantly, help prepare our students with tools and skills to be successful in the future. In order to ensure the success of the 1:1 program we have put in place a variety of support systems.

If you ever need assistance with technology please email 132-lif@sd43.bc.ca. For general support and how to’s with technology go here Riverside 1:1 Support Page.

Edublogs

Our school uses Edublogs to document and showcase your learning and experiences at Riverside. You will use your blog to post work and assignments for classes, to post about your learning and experiences in your portfolio, and write reflections based on the Core Competencies.

Login to your blog here:  myriverside.sd43.bc.ca 

Get Edublog support here: Edublogs User Guides

Office 365

All of our staff and students have FREE access to O365 tools. Our school uses these tools as one of our foundational platforms.

Login to O365 here: login.microsoftonline.com

Coquitlam Open Learning – Applications of Digital Literacy 10

Riverside is fortunate to be able to offer our grade 9’s a course credit for their work in the development of digital literacy skills.  The course is called Applications of Digital Literacy and will be a grade 10 credit given to all our grade 9 students. In their classes, students will be required to demonstrate the ability to efficiently and effectively navigate digital technologies while behaving ethically, responsibly and protecting personal security and privacy.

For more information visit Mr. Robinson’s blog: http://myriverside.sd43.bc.ca/seanr-2014/

Digital Fluencies

Please take a look at Riverside’s Digital Literacies model.

Digital Footprint

A digital footprint is the collection of all the traces you leave in electronic environments as you use or move through them. Some is content you actively volunteer—like your Facebook profile. Other material is passive—the cookies a site stores in your browser, the content your district collects about your use of their equipment, etc. All this data can be aggregated to build a profile of you and your behavior.

(Courtesy of http://www.educatorstechnology.com/2013/04/a-great-guide-on-teaching-students.html)

Tips for Creating a Positive Digital Footprint

  • Always THINK
  • Never post anything that you might find embarrassing later.
  • Be careful with the pictures you post on your public profiles. Remember others will see them and judge you based on their content.
  • Change the privacy settings on your social networking sites so that only your Friends can see your information
  • Do not disclose your personal address, phone number, passwords. Bank card numbers…etc even in private messages. There is always the possibility of somebody hacking into your account and finding them.
  • Do not post things to bully, hurt, blackmail, insult, or afflict any kind of harm on others
  • Always keep in mind that once information has been posted online, it can be almost impossible to remove because of archiving and file sharing. Even though you deactivate your accounts, the information may still be retrieved by others.

Recent Posts

Blackout Poem – “Annabel Lee”

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“Annabel Lee”, written by Edgar Allan Poe in 1849, is a creepy and dark ballad about a man that still loves his dead wife and that spends his nights laying next to her in her tomb. They fell in love when they were young ‘in a Kingdom by the sea’ and he thinks that their love is so strong that his wife’s death was caused by the jealousy of the angels. The name of the woman in the title also lets the reader understand that she is the most significance person in her husband’s life.

The themes that best describe this poem are love, mortality and family. The poem “Annabel Lee” is significant because shows that true love goes over everything, even death, and nothing can really stop it. Furthermore, thanks to the symbols that the author uses, such as the sea where Annabel Lee gets the chill that kills her, the atmosphere is full of suspense, which makes the reader curious and eager to continue the story.

In the middle of the second stanza, when it is said, “But we loved with a love that was more than love”. (9), it can be notice the use of alliteration, a literary device that repeats a speech sound in a sequence of words that are close to each other. It is also mentioned quite a few times within the poem the verse, “in a Kingdom by the sea”. (2, 8, 14, 20, 24), which is an example of visual imagery, as it is useful for the reader to picture the setting where the story takes place. Finally, there is an example of personification when it is said, “That the wind came out of the cloud by night, /Chilling and killing my Annabel Lee (23/24), as the wind is taking human qualities, killing and chilling the woman.

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