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General Information

All students can participate in EL Civics instruction and assessment. However, only ESL students in WIOA II EL Civics education programs can earn payment points for passing COAAP assessments. ABE, ASE, and CTE students can earn CAEP Immigrant Integration Indicator (I3) outcome for CAEP but not payment points for WIOA II. Please see Successful Implementation of COAAPs for CAEP Agencies for a crosswalk for ABE/ASE/CTE student placement into ESL COAAP instructional levels.
Civic Objective#: 47 Program Year: 2025-2026
Civic Objective: Identify strategies and resources to effectively use digital tools safely and securely.
TOPSpro Form #: 471C AAP #: 47.1
Assessment Type: Oral, Written

Level Range

From: Beginning Low To: Advanced

Language and Literacy Objectives

Language and literacy objectives with an asterisk (*) are suitable for beginning low level students.
1 *Identify and/or categorize common uses of the internet (e.g. email, shopping, social networking, online learning, etc.).
2 Research, read and summarize literature pertaining to online ethics and the effects of the internet on society and culture.
3 Read about and discuss issues, consequences & solutions related to using the internet responsibly at home, school or work.
5 *Identify common online safety issues and/or crimes (e.g. plagiarism, identity theft, phishing, online scams, victimization of children, etc.) and/or describe actions and precautions that can be taken to reduce online risks (e.g. change password frequently, monitor children’s internet use, verify website security, avoid using personal information in AI, digital monitoring, etc.).
6 Demonstrate the ability to read and interpret user agreements, change user privacy settings and/or complete other actions on the computer that promote safe use.

Additional Assessment Plan Tasks

Task: 1

Description: Identify Digital Skills and/or Internet Safety Problems (6 items, 12 points possible)

Student will label and/or describe (orally or in writing) up to 6 pictures (BL = 4; BH = 6) depicting digital skills (e.g. emailing, online shopping, doing research, social networking, online learning) and/or internet-safety problems (e.g. opening a suspicious attachment, identity theft, victimization of children). Student will label each picture using words (BL) or phrases (BH).

Optimally, prior to instruction, students will use a technology self-assessment tool in order to determine the information, knowledge and/or competence gaps which will inform instruction.

Points Possible:12Level:Beginning Low - Beginning High
Scoring Rubric Points
Picture is correctly and comprehensibly describe or labeled. 2
Picture is incorrectly or incomprehensibly labeled or no picture. 0

Task: 2

Description: List Successful Online Safety and Security Tips (5 items, 10 points possible)

Student will list 5 precautions they can take (or parents can help their children take) to avoid online risks and use the internet safely and securely (For example: BL – label pictures of the 5 things with appropriate vocabulary words; BH –state a short phrase, e.g. “change password often," "monitor children's internet use," "don't use personal information," etc.).

Points Possible:10Level:Beginning Low - Beginning High
Scoring Rubric Points
Content
Statement is appropriate, clear, complete, and has correct content. There may be errors but they do not interfere with meaning. 2
Statement is appropriate and has correct content. It may be partially complete. There may be errors that interfere with meaning, but the statement can be understood with inference. 1
Statement is inappropriate, incomprehensible, or incorrect, or there is no statement. 0

Task: 3

Description: Read & Interpret Privacy Settings (6 items, 12 points possible)
Given an adapted, authentic set of privacy settings and/or security practices, student will respond orally or in writing to up to 6 level-appropriate questions (IL=5, IH/A=6), such as:

-How can you control who sees your postings on this site?
-Does the company have permission to share your personal information with 3rd parties?
-Will advertising be targeted toward you while using this site?
-How can parents help keep their kids safe online?
-How do you manage your online reputation?
-In which situations would you share your data and/or location?

Points Possible:12Level:Intermediate Low - Advanced
Scoring Rubric Points
Answer is appropriate, clear, complete, and has correct content. There may be errors but they do not interfere with meaning. 2
Answer is appropriate and has correct content. It may be partially complete. There may be errors that interfere with meaning, but the answer can be understood with inference. 1
Answer is inappropriate, incomprehensible, or incorrect, or there is no answer. 0

Task: 4

Description: Write About Internet Safety and Security

Student will complete an authentic writing task, such as write an article for a student newsletter or online post about internet safety and security. In the writing task, the student will include information such as:
1. Describe a common cyber crime or instance of online misinformation.
2. Give detailed examples to illustrate how to prevent a cyber crime or identify an instance of online misinformation.
3. Give reasons why it is important to prevent that particular cyber crime or identify the instance of online misinformation.

Examples of cyber crimes:
-email and internet fraud
-identity fraud
-theft of financial or card payment data
-online scams

Examples of online misinformation:
-phishing
-altered facts
-deep fakes
-hallucinations
-click bait

Optimally, the writing task will be created on a computer and sent to the assessor electronically.

Points Possible:20Level:Intermediate Low - Advanced
Scoring Rubric Points
Content
Addresses all parts of the task effectively. Ideas are well stated, clearly expressed, and supported with concrete, relevant detail. No inference is required. Written in well-organized paragraph(s). 14
Addresses all parts of the task adequately. Some ideas may not be well stated. Contains some relevant detail. May require minimal inference. Written in adequately-organized paragraph(s). 12
Addresses the task in a general way, but may have gaps. Many ideas may not be well stated. May lack appropriate or sufficient detail or clear focus. May require some inference. May be written in loosely-organized paragraph(s). 10
Addresses the task minimally, but relation to the task is evident. May be unfocused or unclear. Little or no supporting detail. May require a substantial degree of inference. May not be written in a paragraph(s). 8
Nothing written, or content is incomprehensible or inappropriate. 0
Grammar, Structure and Mechanics
Almost no errors in grammar, structure, spelling, capitalization or punctuation. 4
Some errors in grammar, structure, spelling, capitalization or punctuation that do not distract the reader. 3
Many errors in grammar, structure, spelling, capitalization or punctuation that may require the reader to infer meaning. 2
Errors make the writing difficult to understand even with inference. 0
Legibility, Neatness, and Spelling
Has a title, uses appropriate indentations, etc. Writing is neat and legible. 2
Uses appropriate indentations. May be legible, but not neat. 1
Does not have a title, does not use appropriate indentations, etc., and/or writing is neither legible nor neat. 0

Rating Scale/Passing Scores

Total Points Possible: 32
Advanced: 28
Intermediate High: 24
Intermediate Low: 20
Beginning High: 16
Beginning Low: 12
View Civic Obj & AAP List