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Amber Willenborg; Robert Detmering – College & Research Libraries, 2025
This national qualitative study investigates academic librarians' instructional experiences, views, and challenges regarding the widespread problem of misinformation. Findings from phenomenological interviews reveal a tension between librarians' professional, moral, and civic obligations to address misinformation and the actual material conditions…
Descriptors: Librarians, Academic Libraries, Information Literacy, Misinformation
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Katherine Landau Wright; Julianne Wenner; Tracey S. Hodges – Reading Teacher, 2024
One strategy for developing science literacy and scientific literacy in young children is through published trade books. To better understand how science literacy and scientific literacy may be represented in elementary classrooms, we investigated children's books that explore science concepts. Specifically, we examined high-quality science trade…
Descriptors: Books, Misinformation, Scientific Literacy, Elementary School Students
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Catherine M. Giroux; Sungha Kim; Aliki Thomas – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2025
Social media may promote knowledge sharing but what users do with the new knowledge and how it may influence practice remains to be known. This exploratory study used a social constructivist lens to understand how health professions educators and researchers integrate knowledge from social media into their respective practices. We purposively…
Descriptors: Social Media, Allied Health Occupations Education, Information Dissemination, Knowledge Management
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Salma Banu Nazeer Khan; Ayse Aysin Bilgin; Deborah Richards; Paul Formosa – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2024
Infographics are visual storytelling techniques used to communicate complex information. However, infographics can be misleading if they are not created ethically. When universities teach how to create infographics, they often do so without emphasizing the ethical issues underlying infographics. To address this gap, we designed a study to educate…
Descriptors: Ethics, Visual Aids, Statistics Education, Design
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H. James Garrett; Mardi Schmeichel; Christopher H. Clark – Democracy & Education, 2025
In this essay, the authors posit that democratic backsliding, rather than partisanship, is the prevailing political situation in which civics and social studies teachers are working. The authors then present evidence from focus groups composed of practicing social studies teachers from across the United States to illustrate how the reliance on…
Descriptors: Democracy, Social Change, Teaching Methods, Social Studies
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R. W. Hildreth – Education and Culture, 2024
The new realities of social media, echo chambers, and partisan information sources have created social forces that challenge core assumptions about democracy. Are we in an epistemological crisis, where separate and distinct communities of inquiry limit shared understandings of truth? In this essay, I turn to the political and educational thought…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Misinformation, Information Sources, Democracy
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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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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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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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Henry Jakubowski; Nicholas Bock – American Biology Teacher, 2024
Climate change caused predominately by carbon dioxide (CO2) from fossil fuel use is a critical issue for our future. It is incumbent on science educators to learn about it and teach it in ways that illustrate the power of science to understand climatic changes and model past, present, and possible climate futures. It is equally important for…
Descriptors: Biology, Science Instruction, Climate, Teaching Methods
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Gerry Dunne – Education and Culture, 2024
This short review examines Chapter 5 of Sarah M. Stitzlein's "Teaching Honesty in a Populist Era: Emphasizing Truth in the Education of Citizens," concentrating on "The Role of Honesty in Teaching About Controversial Issues." Emphasizing what I call "zetetic avoidance creep" (ZAC), the review explores how teachers may…
Descriptors: Ethics, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Educational Practices, Teaching Methods
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Haynes, Chayla; Ward, LaWanda W. M.; Patton, Lori D. – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2023
Racist and sexist power hierarchies endure in the US under the guise of fake news. The authors engage in the Black feminist tradition of truth-telling and centre the experiences of Black women in their examination of fake news and higher education's role in the perpetuation of state violence. Their analysis shows higher education institutions can…
Descriptors: African Americans, Females, Teaching Methods, Misinformation
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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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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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Jannie Lilja; Ester Tottie; Niklas Eklund; Tobias Lindé; Gunhild Hoogensen Gjørv – Journal of Media Literacy Education, 2025
Given a rapidly evolving disinformation environment, many initiatives are currently being developed to counter the harmful impacts of disinformation. The aim of this study is to explore how an SMS intervention, as a hitherto untested modality for raising awareness of disinformation with promising potential and wide reach, could boost media…
Descriptors: Misinformation, Social Media, Media Literacy, Synchronous Communication
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