
Digital Society the IB’s best kept secret, why every IB school should offer this subject? – Rumination (7)
The Digital Society course is now two years old, and students received their first set of results this summer. So I would like to send out a huge congratulations to all of them including my trailblazing six students - well done! (I believe the milestone is important enough for me to trial my new LinkedIn plugin as well hope it works.) However, I just recently checked the IB statistics for numbers entering the Digital Society course and they are a huge disappointment. The last year of ITGS 2275 students took the course (May 2023), and for Digital Society the first cohort 2360 students took the subject (May 2024.)
Only 85 new students, when the course was specifically designed for specialists (e.g. IT and CS teachers) but also non specialist Individuals and Societies teachers to be able to teach? Over this blogpost I will talk a little more about the subject, its brilliance but also some of the problems that I believe can easily be surmounted; so that hopefully some of you in IB schools may make the decision to add Digital Society to your curriculum offering.
Its forerunner ITGS always had its heart in the right place as a course, but its assessments, age and conceptual underpinning was somewhat lacking. The design of the new course and publicity by Joel Adams from the IB was key in making sure the course was different enough to lead to a successful new pathway for many more students.
As zeitgeist would have it, first teaching in 2022 came at just the point that generative AI and ChatGPT3 boisterously announced itself to the world. I remember starting the units of Media and AI, and focusing on 'synthetic digital media' and showing students a number of uses of large language models to their surprise and wonderment. Guess who were the early adopters of AI in my school! I loved my inquiry based formative activity where, unknowingly to them, I placed the coders and the non coders into competing teams and then gave them two lessons to complete a quite complex coding problem in Python (while telling the non-coding team secretly that they could use a LLM to help them.) Guess the astonishment of the coders when the non-coders were declared victors, and then the groans when they realised why.
'Every IB school, in every context - come on start offering Digital Society NOW, you know it is the right thing to do!
The importance of this course in the IB should not be underestimated. It is an option that I believe each student should consider carefully as they choose their Individuals and Societies subject(s), and if necessary persuade the school to run it!
Take image generation, who could believe at the start of the course that I would be able to place in a text prompt and produce a multitude of creative images to enliven this blogpost. But Digital Society is not just about the 'tech' it is about the multitude of ethical and social impacts that arise from almost every context in which technology is used. Around this area a student of DS would immediately consider:
- Power - Intellectual property, who and where does the data come to train this model
- Values and ethics - Creativity, is the use of generative ai image generators a concern for artists and their future employment
- Systems - How biased are these image generators if the datasets underpinning are biased e.g. are students always white
- Expression - is this really art, without 'emotion' or 'feeling' are these images just empty and generic
- Identity - as these image generators get better and better, and are used everywhere how can we judge what is authentic and how does that impact areas such as deepfakes and misinformation



Prompt for Ideogram - "A captivating cinematic photograph of a monochromatic cityscape, with a dedicated student studying diligently at a table. The student's laptop is open, displaying a digital notebook filled with meticulous notes. An AI robot sits attentively beside the student, seemingly engaged in the learning process. The background features bold, eye-catching graffiti that reads "Digital Society is BRILLIANT," blending urban culture with the scene. The atmosphere is a harmonious blend of technology, education, and artistic expression, creating a futuristic yet grounded ambiance."
Note I use Ideogram - as it is one of the only image generators that can truly spell at the moment. A fabulous discussion for DS students to engage in as they unpick the technology behind the 'magic' apart.
So you guessed it. This is a superb course, which is authentic and deals with real world problems and issues and gets students thinking of ways to intervene; and then make a difference in their use of technology alongside understanding its impacts in areas such as politics, business and knowledge. Its is academic, but practical; it is inquiry led (the multimedia video Internal Assessment is excellent) but really tests a student's critical thinking - what is not to like!
Well hear are those surmountable issues and personal thoughts:
- - It has a weird name ... yes parents do need educating about the course and its benefits as part of the options process
- - I do not know who can teach this say the leadership team ... all I can say is be open minded, and you will find many teachers who are based in the humanities can easily take up the mantle
- - It is a fluffy course and no links to university courses ... a strange comment, when considering that all students, in fact all citizens of the world are facing the implications of technology use
- - We do Computer Science ... yes I also teach Computer Science, but these are very different courses (note there should not be any hierarchy as well - both are brilliant in their own ways!)
- - The assessment outcomes seem low ... hmmm yes IB can we address this, it seems to be a legacy from ITGS days, students should be getting better grades for the work that they do
So this post is a call to arms for every headteacher to think seriously about adding this course to their curriculum offering, for every student to consider this as a choice and teachers even if you are not a CS/IT teacher to see that this course is simply great fun and inspiring to teach.
'Here is to more than five thousand Digital Society students by 2026!'