AAEEBL Digital Ethics Principles v.2: version 2

Full List of Resources

You can view all references and more in our library and export them to your own reference manager.

    1. Alim, F., Cardozo, N., Gebhart, G., Gullo, K., & Kalia, A. (2017). Spying on students: School-issued devices and student privacy (p. 49). Electronic Frontier Foundation. 
    2. Association of College and Research Libraries. (2015). Framework for information literacy for higher education. Association of College and Research Libraries. 
    3. Association of Research Libraries, Center for Social Media at American University School of Communication, & Program on Information Justice and Intellectual Property at American University Washington College of Law. (2012). Code of best practices in fair use for academic and research libraries. Association of Research Libraries. 
    4. Auburn University, Office of University Writing. (n.d.). EPortfolio project: Technology. 
    5. Benson, S. R. (Ed.). (2019). Copyright conversations: Rights literacy in a digital world. ALA Editions.
    6. Bose, D., & Pakala, K. (2015). Use of mobile learning strategies and devices for e-portfolio content creation in an engineering thermodynamics and fluid mechanics classes: Student perceptions. 2015 ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, 1–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.18260/p.24978
    7. Brewer, M., & ALA Office for Information Technology Policy. (2008). Fair use evaluator. 
    8. Brown Wilson, C., Slade, C., Kirby, M. M., Downer, T., Fisher, M. B., & Nuessler, S. (2018). Digital ethics and the use of ePortfolio: A scoping review of the literature. International Journal of EPortfolio, 8(2), 115–125.
    9. Cambridge, D. (2008). Audience, integrity, and the living document: EFolio Minnesota and lifelong and lifewide learning with ePortfolios. Computers & Education, 51(3), 1227–1246. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.compedu.2007.11.010
    10. CAST. (2019). About universal design for learning
    11. Center for Media and Social Impact. (2020). Fair use, free speech & intellectual property. 
    12. Center for Persons with Disabilities. (n.d.). Introduction to web accessibility. WebAIM
    13. Charlesworth, A., & Grant, A. (n.d.). 10 ePortfolios and the law: What you and your organisation should know. University of Bristol. 
    14. Chen, B., & deNoyelles, A. (2013). Exploring students’ mobile learning practices in higher education. EDUCAUSE Review. 
    15. Clark, J. E. (2010). The digital imperative: Making the case for a 21st-century pedagogy. Computers and Composition, 27(1), 27–35. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.compcom.2009.12.004
    16. Consortium for School Networking. (2014). Protecting privacy in connected learning toolkit. Consortium for School Networking. 
    17. Cowper, C., & Crompton, M. (2010). VET E-portfolio privacy impact assessment research report. Australian Flexible Learning Framework. 
    18. Creative Commons. (n.d.). About the licenses. 
    19. Creative Commons. (n.d.). Share your work. 
    20. Crews, K. D., & Buttler, D. K. (2008). Fair use checklist. Columbia University Libraries. 
    21. Datig, I., & Russell, B. (2014). Instructing college students on the ethics of information use at the reference desk: A guide and literature review. The Reference Librarian, 55(3), 234–246. https://doi.org/10.1080/02763877.2014.912458
    22. Drachsler, H., & Greller, W. (2016). Privacy and analytics: It’s a DELICATE issue a checklist for trusted learning analytics. Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference on Learning Analytics & Knowledge, 89–98. https://doi.org/10.1145/2883851.2883893
    23. Future of Privacy Forum. (n.d.). Retrieved January 11, 2020, from https://fpf.org
    24. Future of Privacy Forum, & The Software and Information Industry Association. (2015). K-12 school service provider pledge to safeguard student privacy. 
    25. Galanek, J. D., Gierdowski, D. C., & Brooks, D. C. (2018). ECAR study of undergraduate students and information technology, 2018 (p. 47) [Research report]. EDUCAUSE. 
    26. Gallagher, C. W., & Poklop, L. L. (2014). ePortfolios and audience: Teaching a critical twenty-first century skill. International Journal of EPortfolio, 4(1), 7–20.
    27. Gallagher, K., Magid, L., & Pruitt, K. (2019). The educator’s guide to student data privacy. ConnectSafely. 
    28. Giorgini, F. (2010). An interoperable ePortfolio tool for all. In M. Wolpers, P. A. Kirschner, M. Scheffel, S. Lindstaedt, & V. Dimitrova (Eds.), Sustaining TEL: From innovation to learning and practice (pp. 500–505). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-16020-2_44
    29. Hargittai, E., & Marwick, A. (2016). “What Can I Really Do?” Explaining the privacy paradox with online apathy. International Journal of Communication, 10, 3737–3757.
    30. Harris, K. D. (2016). Ready for school: Recommendations for the ed tech industry to protect the privacy of student data. California Department of Justice. 
    31. Hearne, S. (n.d.). Request map generator. 
    32. Henning, M. A., Hawken, S., MacDonald, J., McKimm, J., Brown, M., Moriarty, H., Gasquoine, S., Chan, K., Hilder, J., & Wilkinson, T. (2017). Exploring educational interventions to facilitate health professional students’ professionally safe online presence. Medical Teacher, 39(9), 959–966. https://doi.org/10.1080/0142159X.2017.1332363
    33. Hobbs, R. (2010). Copyright clarity: How fair use supports digital learning. Corwin Press. https://doi.org/10.4135/9781452219530
    34. Hocutt, D., & Brown, M. (2018). Globalizing the composition classroom with Google Apps for Education. In R. Rice & K. St. Amant (Eds.), Thinking globally, composing locally: Rethinking online writing in the age of the global internet (pp. 320–339). University Press of Colorado; JSTOR. https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctvgd1p0
    35. Ivanova, M., Marín, V. I., Tur, G., & Buchem, I. (2019). Towards privacy issues in personal learning environments: A conceptual model of PLE privacy. European Journal of Open, Distance and E-Learning, 22(1). 
    36. James Cook University. (n.d.). EPortfolios & copyright. 
    37. Jones, B., & Leverenz, C. (2017). Building Personal Brands with Digital Storytelling ePortfolios. International Journal of EPortfolio, 7(1), 67–91.
    38. Keener, M. (2015). Contextualizing copyright: Fostering students’ understanding of their rights and responsibilities as content creators. Virginia Libraries, 61(1). https://doi.org/10.21061/valib.v61i1.1328
    39. Klein, L. F. (2013). The Social ePortfolio: Integrating social media and models of learning in academic ePortfolios. In K. V. Wills & R. Rice (Eds.), ePortfolio performance support systems: Constructing, presenting, and assessing portfolios (pp. 57–74). WAC Clearinghouse. 
    40. Lee, H., & Templeton, R. (2008). Ensuring equal access to technology: Providing assistive technology for students with disabilities. Theory Into Practice, 47(3), 212–219.
    41. Licastro, A. (2016). Excavating ePortfolios: What student-driven data reveals about multimodal composition and instruction. 
    42. Lorenzo, G., & Ittelson, J. (2005). An overview of institutional e-portfolios. EDUCAUSE Learning Initiative, 2.
    43. Luera, G., Brunvand, S., & Marra, T. (2016). Challenges and rewards of implementing ePortfolios through a bottom-up approach. International Journal of EPortfolio, 6(2), 127–137.
    44. Lynch, M. (2018, May 21). Ask these 9 questions to determine if your education vendor takes data privacy seriously. The Tech Edvocate. 
    45. Mackrill, D., & Taylor, S. (2008). FlashPort – The next generation in e-portfolios? The use of portable applications as e-portfolio tools in teacher education. Journal of Systemics, Cybernetics and Informatics, 6(6), 80–85.
    46. Mann, K. (2013, June 20). Online assignments and student privacy. Academic Technology. 
    47. Matthews-DeNatale, G., Blevins-Bohanan, S. J., Rothwell, C. G., & Wehlburg, C. M. (2017). Redesigning learning: Eportfolios in support of reflective growth within individuals and organizations. In T. Batson, T. L. Rhodes, C. E. Watson, H. L. Chen, K. S. Coleman, & A. Harver (Eds.), Field guide to eportfolio (pp. 14–24). Association of American Colleges and Universities. 
    48. Nagler, A., Andolsek, K., & Padmore, J. S. (2009). The Unintended consequences of portfolios in graduate medical education. Academic Medicine, 84(11), 1522–1526. https://doi.org/10.1097/ACM.0b013e3181bb2636
    49. National Conference of State Legislatures. (2018, October 26). Student data privacy. 
    50. National Council of Teachers of English. (2018, October 25). Code of best practices in fair use for media literacy education. 
    51. National Disability Authority. (2014). What is universal design? Centre for Excellence in Universal Design. 
    52. Newitz, A. (2005, February 17). Dangerous terms: A user’s guide to EULAs. Electronic Frontier Foundation. 
    53. Newman, T., Beetham, H., & Knight, S. (2018). Digital experience insights survey 2018: Findings from students in UK further and higher education (p. 76). 
    54. Oswal, S. K. (2013). Accessible ePortfolios for visually-impaired users: Interfaces, designs, and infrastructures. In K. V. Wills & R. Rice (Eds.), ePortfolio performance support systems: Constructing, presenting, and assessing portfolios (pp. 135–153). WAC Clearinghouse. 
    55. Poole, P., Brown, M., McNamara, G., O’Hara, J., O’Brien, S., & Burns, D. (2018). Challenges and supports towards the integration of ePortfolios in education. Lessons to be learned from Ireland. Heliyon, 4(11). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2018.e00899
    56. Privacy Technical Assistance Center. (2014). Protecting student privacy while using online educational services. U.S. Department of Education. 
    57. Privacy Technical Assistance Center. (2016). Protecting student privacy while using online educational services: Model terms of service. U.S. Department of Education. 
    58. Refaei, B., & Benander, R. (2019). Affordable technology solutions. Research in Online Literacy Education, 2(1). 
    59. Ribble, M., & Park, M. (2019). The digital citizenship handbook for school leaders: Fostering positive interactions online. International Society for Technology in Education.
    60. Rife, M. C., Slattery, S., & DeVoss, D. N. (Eds.). (2011). Copy(write): Intellectual property in the writing classroom. WAC Clearinghouse. 
    61. Seymour ∗, W., & Lupton, D. (2004). Holding the line online: Exploring wired relationships for people with disabilities. Disability & Society, 19(4), 291–305. https://doi.org/10.1080/09687590410001689421
    62. Sherpa, FERPA. (2020). The student privacy resource center
    63. Siegfried, B. (2011). Enhanced student technology support with cross-platform mobile apps. Proceedings of the 39th Annual ACM SIGUCCS Conference on User Services, 31–34. https://doi.org/10.1145/2070364.2070373
    64. Slade, C. (2017). Using ePortfolios to strengthen student identity verification in assessment: A response to contract cheating. 2017 EPortfolio Forum EBook of Short Papers, 27–34. https://eportfoliosaustralia.files.wordpress.com/2017/09/ebook_eportfolioforum_2017_papers_v1_20170907.pdf
    65. Slade, C., Murfin, K., & Readman, K. (2013). Evaluating processes and platforms for potential ePortfolio use: The role of the middle agent. International Journal of EPortfolio, 3(2), 177–188.
    66. Slade, C., & Tsai, J. (2018). Building connections through integrated ePortfolio curriculum. 2018 EPortfolio Forum EBook of Short Papers, 50–56. 
    67. Slade, C., Wilson, C. B., Kirby, M., Downer, T., Fisher, M., & Isbel, S. (2018). A new concern: Ethical decision making in students’ secondary use of data from their ePortfolios. 2018 EPortfolio Forum EBook of Short Papers, 71–75. 
    68. Stanford University Libraries. (n.d.). Copyright and fair use
    69. Stewart, S. M. (2013). Making practice transparent through e-portfolio. Women and Birth, 26(4), e117–e121. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wombi.2013.02.005
    70. Strivens, J. (2007). A survey of e-pdp and e-portfolio practice in UK Higher Education. The Higher Education Academy, 2, 1–24.
    71. The University of Queensland. (n.d.). Digital essentials. Library.
    72. The University of Queensland. (2019). ePortfolio for students: Develop a showcase portfolio. The University of Queensland. 
    73. Thiede, M. (2018). The basics of copyright and fair use. 
    74. Thiede, M., & Zerkee, J. (2019). An active learning approach to teaching copyright essentials. In S. R. Benson (Ed.), Copyright conversations: Rights literacy in a digital world (pp. 141–158). ALA Editions.
    75. University of Canberra. (2019, August 30). How to use Mahara ePortfolio. 
    76. University of Queensland Library. (2020). eProfessionalism. A Digital Essentials Module. Retrieved from https://web.library.uq.edu.au/node/5274/6
    77. University of Oregon. (2011). Consent for disclosure of education record: EPortfolio participation. University of Oregon, Office of the Registrar. 
    78. University of Ottawa. (n.d.). EPortfolio coach and student confidentiality agreement
    79. W3C. (n.d.). Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1. Retrieved May 24, 2020, from https://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG21/
    80. W3C. (2019, June 5). Introduction to web accessibility. W3C Web Accessibility Initiative. 
    81. Wills, K. V., & Rice, R. (Eds.). (2013). ePortfolio performance support systems: Constructing, presenting, and assessing portfolios. WAC Clearinghouse. 
    82. World Intellectual Property Organization. (2004). WIPO Intellectual Property Handbook. WIPO. 
    83. Wuetherick, B., & Dickinson, J. (2015). Why ePortfolios? Student perceptions of ePortfolio use in continuing education learning environments. International Journal of EPortfolio, 5(1), 39–53.
    84. Yancey, K. B. (2019). ePortfolio as curriculum: Models and practices for developing students' ePortfolio literacy. Stylus Publishing. 

 
This document was created by the AAEEBL Digital Ethics Task Force: Amy Cicchino (Auburn University), Megan Haskins (Auburn University), Megan Crowley-Watson (Edward Waters College), Elaine Gray (Appalachian State University), Morgan Gresham (University of South Florida), Kristina Hoeppner (Catalyst, New Zealand), Kevin Kelly (San Francisco State University), Megan Mize (Old Dominion University), Christine Slade (University of Queensland), Heather Stuart (Auburn University), and Sarah Zurhellen (Appalachian State University)

This work is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0
CC iconby iconsa icon

This page has paths:

This page references: