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K. Viswanath, Editor; Tiffany E. Taylor, Editor; Holly G. Rhodes, Editor; Committee on Understanding and Addressing Misinformation About Science, Contributor; Board on Science Education, Contributor; Division of Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education, Contributor – National Academies Press, 2025
Our current information ecosystem makes it easier for misinformation about science to spread and harder for people to figure out what is scientifically accurate. Proactive solutions are needed to address misinformation about science, an issue of public concern given its potential to cause harm at individual, community, and societal levels.…
Descriptors: Misinformation, Sciences, Information Dissemination, Information Sources
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Carla Bang; Kelly Carroll; Niyati Mistry; Justin Presseau; Natasha Hudek; Sezgi Yanikomeroglu; Jamie C. Brehaut – Health Education & Behavior, 2025
Misinformation hinders the impact of public health initiatives. Efforts to counter misinformation likely do not consider the full range of factors known to affect how individuals make decisions and act on them. Implementation science tools and concepts can facilitate the development of more effective interventions against health misinformation by…
Descriptors: Misinformation, Scientific Concepts, Decision Making, Health Behavior
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Preston P. Thakral; Connor C. Starkey; Aleea L. Devitt; Daniel L. Schacter – Creativity Research Journal, 2025
Episodic retrieval plays a functional-adaptive role in supporting divergent creative thinking, the ability to creatively combine different pieces of information. However, the same constructive memory process that provides this benefit can also lead to memory errors. Prior behavioral work has shown that there is a positive correlation between the…
Descriptors: Memory, Recall (Psychology), Misinformation, Creative Thinking
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Matthew T. Bell; Alicia Stephan; Nicholas Cumpian; Hawwa Alao; Pradeep R. Atla; Neetika Srivastava; Wayne M. Fleischman; Viktor E. Eysselein; Sofiya Reicher – Health Education Journal, 2025
Background and Objectives: Short video platforms have become one of the most common methods for disseminating medical information on social media. We analysed gastrointestinal (GI)-related content on TikTok, focusing on the creators' background, patterns of content utilisation and overall content quality and understandability, using validated…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Social Media, Information Dissemination, Human Body
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Soraya Kresin; Kerstin Kremer; Andreas Nehring; Alexander Georg Büssing – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2025
The rise of social media platforms and subsequent lack of traditional gatekeeping mechanisms have enabled the proliferation of scientific disinformation. Users attempting to properly evaluate scientific information and disinformation are immensely obstructed by media communication mechanisms such as filter bubbles and echo chambers. Given the…
Descriptors: Grade 10, Social Media, Science Education, Familiarity
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Martina A. Rau; Anna E. Premo – Educational Psychology Review, 2025
Misinformation can have severe negative effects on people's decisions, behaviors, and on society at large. This creates a need to develop and evaluate educational interventions that prepare people to recognize and respond to misinformation. We systematically review 107 articles describing educational interventions across various lines of research.…
Descriptors: Literature Reviews, Misinformation, Intervention, Educational Research
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Kristy Roschke; Tara Bartlett – Adult Literacy Education, 2025
For nearly a decade, concerns about misinformation influencing U.S. elections have grown. As modern elections are increasingly characterized by overwhelming amounts of information, trust in the media is at an all-time low, with people across the political spectrum reporting low confidence in the mass media's ability to report the news "fully,…
Descriptors: Adults, Media Literacy, Critical Thinking, Mass Media Effects
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Virgilio A. Rivas – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
This essay discusses the aesthetic potential within Bernard Stiegler's concept of technics, particularly its nascent or preactual form of realism. This realism fosters a sense of spontaneity, crucial to a modal engagement with time, being, and history in the face of contemporary planetary enframing. By critically appraising Stiegler's framework,…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Art, Influence of Technology, Technological Advancement
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Martha Perez-Mugg – Educational Theory, 2025
Recent calls by legislators to exclude "divisive concepts" and histories from our curricula pose a challenge to the development of students' epistemic responsibility and agency in classrooms. In this paper, Martha Perez-Mugg examines the classroom as a space for the development of epistemic responsibility, ultimately suggesting that…
Descriptors: Misinformation, Teaching Methods, Epistemology, Responsibility
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Constantinos Xenofontos – For the Learning of Mathematics, 2025
Building on Umberto Eco's concept of Ur-Fascism, this essay examines how authoritarian traits permeate mathematics education. Through a reflective analysis of my prior research within the context of Cyprus, I discuss troubling patterns of centralised control, rigid traditions, and hierarchical structures shaping the educational landscape. These…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Mathematics Education, Authoritarianism, Misinformation
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Ying Wu; Rita Elaine Silver – Language Awareness, 2025
Hospitals serve as a public space for medical practice. They also serve as an educational space. Effective, transparent, and timely delivery of health information is important at all times but especially in times of pan/epidemics. A crucial part of the necessary information dissemination is language-in-use for multiple purposes (medical practice,…
Descriptors: Hospitals, Medicine, Language Usage, Linguistics
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Rosie Goodman; Jon Ord – Educational Review, 2025
This UK-based study examines how people learned to identify digital misinformation. This included what experiences enabled this development, and the skills that were acquired in the process. This is a small-scale qualitative study of participants who self-reported as being confident in spotting digital misinformation and the data was analysed…
Descriptors: Misinformation, News Media, Media Literacy, Foreign Countries
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Robert W. Danielson; Neil G. Jacobson; Erika A. Patall; Gale M. Sinatra; Olusola O. Adesope; Alana A. U. Kennedy; Bethany H. Bhat; Onur Ramazan; Blessing Akinrotimi; Gabriel Nketah; Gan Jin; Oluwafemi J. Sunday – Educational Psychologist, 2025
Misinformation around scientific issues is rampant on social media platforms, raising concerns among educators and science communicators. A variety of approaches have been explored to confront this growing threat to science literacy. For example, refutations have been used both proactively as warning labels and in attempts to inoculate against…
Descriptors: Misinformation, Scientific Research, Social Media, Scientific Literacy
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Shelby M. Cagle; Ashley A. Anderson; Nicole C. Kelp – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2025
Teaching science in an age of disinformation and misinformation requires empowering students to address inaccurate information in evidence-based ways. Science communication scholarship highlights the growing importance of inclusive and relational approaches for addressing misinformation. Thus, we developed, implemented, and evaluated an…
Descriptors: Science Education, Science Instruction, Misinformation, Information Literacy
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Marie Alina Yeo; Benjamin Luke Moorhouse; Yuwei Wan – TESL-EJ, 2025
This paper looks at Google's NotebookLM, an AI-powered research assistant tool that can represent dense academic content in a range of output modes, like FAQs, timelines, study guides, and, most uniquely, as "Deep Dive" discussions. The discussions mimic a talk-show, where two AI-hosts unpack complex ideas from reading or audio texts,…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Research Tools, Technology Uses in Education, Computer Mediated Communication
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