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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
Curnalia, Rebecca M. L. – Journalism and Mass Communication Educator, 2023
This study explores the link between knowledge and skills related to online information consumption and implications for fake news beliefs and support for censorship. The goal of this project was to explore the link between media instruction and students' news beliefs and attitudes. In particular, survey participants were asked about fake news…
Descriptors: College Students, Media Literacy, Media Education, Censorship
Mrah, Isam – Digital Education Review, 2022
This paper set out to explore online users' perceptions, attitudes, and practices towards mis/disinformation on social networking sites and investigate how they engage with, identify, and evaluate information disorder on social networking sites. The correlation study provides empirical insights into the complex relationship between digital media…
Descriptors: Media Literacy, Misinformation, Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students
Kristina Mullis – ProQuest LLC, 2022
In January 2020, the World Health Organization declared the 2019 novel coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak to be a public health emergency. More than 500 million cases and more than 6 million deaths have been reported, with these numbers growing each day. A major public health initiative for controlling the COVID-19 pandemic was vaccine development…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Immunization Programs, College Students
Ana Isabel Cea; Inmaculada Sánchez-Macías – Journal of Technology and Science Education, 2024
Fake news and artificial intelligence are phenomena addressed in academia and research within the fields of communication and audiovisual education. As a medium and language, cinema has mirrored these challenges, exemplified by the short film "Deep Soria." The primary objective proposed in this study is to ascertain whether this short…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Journalism Education, Elementary Education
Robert W. Danielson; Benjamin C. Heddy; Onur Ramazan; Gan Jin; Kanvarbir S. Gill; Danielle N. Berry – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2025
Misinformation has been extensively studied as both maliciously intended propaganda and accidentally experienced incorrect assumptions. We contend that "conceptual contamination" is the process by which the learning of incorrect information interferes, pollutes, or otherwise disrupts the learning of correct information. This is similar…
Descriptors: Misinformation, Propaganda, Deception, Misconceptions
Brady L. Nash – Reading Research Quarterly, 2025
As meaning-making increasingly happens in digital spaces, it is essential for researchers to examine how students learn to critically read and navigate within and across constantly changing online platforms. This qualitative study examines university students' experiences reading and navigating online. To do so, the author examines self-created…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Reading Processes, Social Media, Teaching Methods
Henriikka Vartiainen; Juho Kahila; Matti Tedre; Erkko Sointu; Teemu Valtonen – Journal of Media Literacy Education, 2023
This study explores what kinds of social media services children use in their everyday lives, how children describe their strategies for spotting fake news, and what kinds of fake news they report having encountered in their lived experiences. The article is based on an online questionnaire conducted in Finnish comprehensive schools with children…
Descriptors: News Reporting, Misinformation, Student Attitudes, Student Experience
Gan Jin; Onur Ramazan; Robert William Danielson – Journal of Experimental Education, 2024
As educators, we often seek to engage students' prior knowledge to help them learn new and potentially difficult science content. However, sometimes our experiences with the world lead us to create misconceptions that run counter to the scientific consensus. Refutational texts have been shown to be more effective at changing individuals'…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Students, English Instruction, Misconceptions
Jeffrey A. Greene; Christina Hollander-Blackmon; Eric A. Kirk; Victor M. Deekens – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2024
More and more, people are abandoning the active pursuit of news, assuming instead that important information will be pushed to them via their social media networks. This approach to news makes people susceptible to the vast amounts of misinformation online, yet research on the effects of this kind of engagement is mixed. More research is needed on…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, COVID-19, Pandemics, Decision Making
Favour C. Uroko; George C. Nche – British Journal of Religious Education, 2024
The aim of this study was to explore: 1) how religious education (RE) contributed to COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy among Christian students in Nigeria; and 2) how RE could be used to counter vaccine hesitancy among students in Nigeria. Although progress has been made in examining different aspects of the coronavirus vaccine hesitancy in Nigeria,…
Descriptors: Misconceptions, Misinformation, Immunization Programs, Foreign Countries
Smith, Kim; Wade, Jeannette; Jowers, Joseph – Journalism and Mass Communication Educator, 2023
An analysis of 640 posts from the social media platforms of 14 students at a historically Black university revealed that entertainment accounted for 68% of their social media content, "uplift" 17%, and empowerment 14%. Educators worry that students may be squandering online resources that could help improve their lives when they choose…
Descriptors: Black Colleges, Social Media, Empowerment, Misinformation
David H. Kahl Jr. – Journal of Communication Pedagogy, 2024
Post-truth messages have been present in our society for centuries, but their prevalence has become greatly exacerbated in recent decades due to the ease in which they can be disseminated throughout society. Neoliberal entities carefully craft these messages to accomplish economic goals and employ nefarious tactics when disseminating them. This…
Descriptors: College Students, Social Media, Communication (Thought Transfer), Ethics
Anne Zappi Williams – ProQuest LLC, 2022
This mixed methods investigation sought to explore the effectiveness of a stuttering training module with preservice teachers. Stigmatizing attitudes about people who stutter (PWS) have been found not only in society at large, but also in specific groups including teachers. Misinformation about stuttering in educators can render early experiences…
Descriptors: Stuttering, Learning Modules, Preservice Teachers, Elementary School Teachers
Güliz Karaarslan-Semiz; Birgül Çakir-Yildirim; Büsra Tuncay-Yüksel; Nilay Ozturk; Meltem Irmak – Journal of Turkish Science Education, 2023
This study aimed to investigate how pre-service teachers' intentions to vaccinate against COVID-19 were related to their perceptions of the causes of COVID-19, which are conspiracy thoughts, perceptions of environmental and faith factors, trust in scientists, and risk perceptions toward COVID-19 vaccines. In this study, a cross-sectional survey…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Intention, Immunization Programs, COVID-19
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