Digital Literacy Classroom Toolkit for the 2025–2026 School Year

Discover the three offline lesson plans districts are using to teach the digital habits every student needs on Day One.

Download the Toolkit

Lesson Plans Included in the Toolkit:

K-2: Netiquette and Cyberbullying

3-5: Safekeeping Personal Information

6-8: Understanding Identity Theft

See What Other Districts Are Already Using

Preview the same digital safety and citizenship lessons helping K–8 students understand identity theft, cyberbullying, and online privacy – without needing a device.

 Direct Alignment to Core Topics:

These lessons cover core concepts found in Learning.com’s digital safety modules, like responsible online behavior, understanding digital footprints, cyberbullying prevention, and basic privacy skills.

 Ready-to-Go & Teacher-Friendly:

Just like the lesson plans in our full digital literacy curriculum solution, each lesson plan in this toolkit includes discussion starters, simple activities, and extension ideas that make it easy for teachers to model concepts and engage students in real-world scenarios. Use these lessons to promote digital safety during this back-to-school season.

Is Your Curriculum Preparing Students for Real Digital Threats?

Can your students spot a fake online message?
Would they know how to respond if someone impersonated them online?
If you’re not sure, the checklist inside this PDF might surprise you.

Not All 'Digital Literacy' Programs Are Built Alike

One covers strong password habits and phishing awareness.
Another leaves out AI and data privacy entirely.
This guide shows you which is which – and why it matters now more than ever.

Do Your Materials Truly Align with What States Expect?

You might assume your resources match state standards or ISTE expectations – but some critical gaps only appear when you see them side by side.
We’ve laid it out in one place.

Built for the Way Teachers Actually Teach

No prep-time left? No problem.
These lessons were built for back-to-school delivery – even offline.
See how they’re already in use without adding to teacher workload.