The value of responsibility emphasizes the inherently participatory and distributed nature of new media. Of course, responsibility is not a novel concept in education. The Secretary’s Commission on Achieving Necessary Skills (1991) identified responsibility—exerting a high level of effort and persevering towards goal attainment—as an essential personal quality for productive workers in the global economy. Responsibility is closely related to numerous other life and career skills such as initiative, self-direction, productivity, accountability, and leadership. According to the Partnership for 21st Century Skills (n.d.), these “soft” or “applied” skills are essential complements to cognitive skills and can be at least as important in determining both academic and career success. Responsibility is also related to the ability to evaluate the reliability and credibility of different information sources (judgment) and to the discipline to use technology, information, and media legally and ethically.
Responsible students:
Reflection Questions