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Showing all 11 results Save | Export
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Santamaria, Michele; Schomberg, Jessica – College & Research Libraries, 2022
Drawing from Wendy Holliday's use of metaphor to generate exploration around information literacy discourse, we pose some preliminary ideas about mapping a vaccination metaphor onto one-shots. We do so to offer another lens through which to explore the mechanisms and implications of one-shots being viewed as common-sensical and unassailable. Thus,…
Descriptors: Library Instruction, Information Literacy, Teaching Methods, Misinformation
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Martin Gameli Akakpo; Patrick Kafui Akakpo – Discover Education, 2024
YouTube is a popular source of educational and recreational videos. Evidence suggests that medical students consult YouTube regularly and use it to supplement information they receive from their medical educators. On the other hand, some medical educators discourage and even avoid YouTube and other internet sources due to ethical concerns. In this…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Medical Education, Teaching Methods, Information Literacy
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Melanie Trecek-King; John Cook – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2024
Inoculation theory, which applies the biological concept of vaccination to misinformation, provides a range of ways to effectively build resilience against misinformation. In this article, we define and organize the various types of inoculation, which includes three delivery mechanisms that can be useful in the classroom--passive, active, and…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Resilience (Psychology), Misinformation, Teaching Methods
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Adam Mastandrea – English Teaching Forum, 2023
Over the past several years, there has been a resurgence in efforts to develop curriculum and teaching skills in the area of media literacy for language educators and language learners. The increased focus on teaching media literacy in the language classroom may be motivated by the perceived increase in the intentional production of false…
Descriptors: Information Literacy, Misinformation, Media Literacy, English Instruction
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Iva Božovic – Journal of Political Science Education, 2024
This work reports on the implementation of a self-contained data-literacy exercise designed for use in undergraduate classes to help students practice data literacy skills such as interpreting and evaluating evidence and assessing arguments based on data. The exercises use already developed data-visualizations to test and develop students' ability…
Descriptors: Data Use, Teaching Methods, Data, Information Literacy
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Treice de Oliveira Moreira; Cláudio Azevedo Passos; Flávio Roberto Matias da Silva; Paulo Márcio Souza Freire; Isabel Fernandes de Souza; Cláudia Rödel Bosaipo Sales da Silva; Ronaldo Ribeiro Goldschmidt – Education and Information Technologies, 2024
The problem of propagating disinformation (a.k.a. "fake news") on social media has increased significantly in the last few years. There are several initiatives around the world to combat this serious problem. Maybe the most promising ones involve training people to identify "fake news." The use of digital educational games…
Descriptors: Deception, News Reporting, Misinformation, Portuguese
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Ziv, Nadav; Bene, Emma – College & Research Libraries, 2022
Misinformation has become a regular feature of the Internet. Research suggests that everyone, including young people who have grown up with digital devices, struggles to differentiate fact from fiction online because they read closely rather than turning to external sources. We analyzed the resources students find when they seek advice offered by…
Descriptors: College Students, Information Literacy, Teaching Methods, Evaluation Methods
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Nicholson, Karen P.; Seale, Maura – College & Research Libraries, 2022
This essay examines the information literacy one-shot in conjunction with similar one-off training approaches often found in diversity education. Through this lens, we interrogate the ways that superficial approaches to complex issues such as mis- or disinformation and racism inhibit the kinds of engagement and (un)learning that transformative…
Descriptors: Information Literacy, Library Instruction, Teaching Methods, Misinformation
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Mandi Goodsett – Journal of Information Literacy, 2024
Combating the spread of misinformation is a struggle that has inspired considerable research in the fields of psychology, education, political science, and information science, among others. Such research has found that "prebunking" or "inoculation" techniques--strategies that reduce the acceptance of misinformation before one…
Descriptors: Information Literacy, Library Instruction, Misinformation, Librarians
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Tania Josephine Martin; Yoan Gutiérrez Vázquez; Robiert Sepúlveda-Torres; José Ignacio Abreu Salas – Education, Citizenship and Social Justice, 2025
The spread of fake news (FN) has attracted attention from disciplines ranging from social sciences to Artificial Intelligence. This work is novel because it explores the news-sharing behaviour of social-media users, focussing on those that spread FN, rather than the psychological motivations behind them. The 14-item Risky News-Sharing Quotient…
Descriptors: Deception, News Reporting, Misinformation, Intervention
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Yaseen Ali Azi; Sami Abdullah Hamdi; Mohammed Ahmad Okasha – HOW, 2024
The task of verifying credible and original information is now more complicated, especially for undergraduate students. This study uses information literacy and discourse analysis to develop English as a foreign language learners' critical reading skills while verifying information on social media. A reading test including false news was used to…
Descriptors: Information Literacy, Discourse Analysis, Comparative Analysis, Reading Tests