Technology
Culture
Legal
Communication
Etc.
100

the assumption that  a communicator will have and prefer to use his or her own electronic device, such as a PC, tablet, or smartphone

Bring your own device (BYOD)

100

a shared system of symbols, beliefs, attitudes, values, expectations, and norms for behavior

Culture

100

a creative work for which the creator or owner has relinquished all rights of ownership so that everyone may use and modify it freely without violating legal or ethical standards

Public domain

100

working with someone knowledgeable and experienced in your field who is willing to teach you, advise you, and help you reach your goals

Mentoring

100

openness with the information needed to accurately process perceived messages

Transparency

200

 technology that helps reduce the impact of handicap ion  a  person’s ability to participate fully in an activity or conversation

Assistive technologies

200

all the characteristics and experiences that define us as individuals, including physical and mental characteristics, cultural background, and personal life

Diversity

200

an exception to copyright law that permits people to use a limited portion of a creative work for commentary, satire, parody, news reporting, teaching, or archiving

Fair use

200

communication that includes all relevant information, is true in every sense, and is not deceptive in any way

Ethical communication

200

online content that is customized depending on the reported location of the device accessing it

Location-aware content

300

a design approach that plans for optimal viewing on small screens such as on smartphones or tablets

Mobile-first

300

the tendency to judge all other groups according to the standards, behaviors, and customs of one’s own group

Ethnocentrism

300

a legal protection that ensures the owner of an idea or creative work will retain ownership of it

Copyright

300

a specific device or pathway used for sending a message, such as a mobile phone

Communication channel

300

assignment a wide range of generalized and often inaccurate attributes to an individual on the basis of membership in a particular group

Stereotyping

400

the ability to send vast amounts of data instantly, constantly, and globally

Radical connectivity

400

a communication model in which everyone may participate freely, such as using online social media tools like Facebook or Twitter 

Social communication model

400

the ownership rights to a communicated idea such as a book, speech, or song 

Intellectual property (IP)

400

a means of transmitting a message, such as text message or email

Communication medium

400

a grouping of careers that require similar education and training

Career cluster

500

effectiveness in retrieving and understanding digital information and using it ethically

What is Digital information fluency

500

the pattern of physical cues, environmental stimuli, and implicit understanding that convey meaning between two members of the same culture

Cultural context

500

a policy that provides guidelines to decide what behavior is most ethical

Code of ethics

500

 the practice of secretly embedding marketing content into non-marketing communications.

Stealth marketing

500

an approach that makes the audience’s needs a top priority

Audience-centered approach

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