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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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Kelly Y. L. Ku; Jiarui Li; Yueming Luo; Yunya Song – Health Education Research, 2025
The rapid spread of health misinformation on social media poses significant challenges to public health crisis. Mpox misinformation has portrayed it as exclusively a sexually transmitted infection, resulting in misperceptions about infection risk and stigmatization of affected groups. This study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of different…
Descriptors: Social Media, Misinformation, Error Correction, Stereotypes
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Onifade, Abdurrahman Bello – Education for Information, 2023
Misinformation is a global pandemic, fueled by the sophistication of the human intellect, algorithmic systems among other factors. Enhanced by the proliferation of algorithms optimized for engagement and reactions on social media, misinformation has ignited or hampered sociopolitical participation and movements and dissuaded citizens from being…
Descriptors: Misinformation, Accuracy, Information Dissemination, Online Systems
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Álvarez-García, Olaya; Sureda-Negre, Jaume – Journal of Environmental Education, 2023
In recent years, environmental issues have become the focus of societal concerns. In this context, the business world has been consolidating a form of green marketing management that merely conveys ambiguous or misleading messages rather than reflecting environmentally friendly business practices. This phenomenon is called greenwashing. This…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Evidence Based Practice, Advertising, Conservation (Environment)
Daniel Q. Earixson – ProQuest LLC, 2023
Non-evidence-based practices (NEBPs) are interventions that have not been indicated by research to be effective in treating the core deficits of autism or the related behavioral challenges across developmental domains. Under the umbrella of NEBPs are the interventions for autism that are physically and/or emotionally harmful, as well as those that…
Descriptors: Autism Spectrum Disorders, Intervention, Behavior Change, Behavior Problems
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Eric Carlsson; Maria Carbin; Bo Nilsson – Critical Studies in Education, 2023
In this paper, we engage with five Swedish universities' discursive articulation of, and responses to, an alleged post-truth crisis in communication, aimed at the public. Taking discourse theory as our point of departure, the aim is to analyse how universities are trying to maintain or restore trustworthiness against a backdrop of problems with…
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Culture Conflict
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Nolan Higdon; Allison Butler – Critical Education, 2023
Fake news, while problematic in its own way, is not an anomaly and though intimately connected to the Trump administration, did not begin, nor end, with his administration. Fake news is part of a larger environment of racism in the structure of the news, where stories of People of Color are often skewed in a negative way, positive contributions…
Descriptors: News Media, Teaching Methods, Critical Thinking, Culturally Relevant Education
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Michelle Pleace; Nicky Nicholls – Studies in Higher Education, 2024
The Impostor Phenomenon (IP) refers to the psychological experience of individuals mistakenly perceiving themselves as incompetent, despite external evidence of their success. Research has highlighted the prevalence of impostor feelings within academic settings, particularly among women. To better understand the gender gap in academia, our…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Self Efficacy, Females
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Benjamin C. Herman; Sarah Poor; Michael P. Clough; Asha Rao; Aaron Kidd; Daniel De Jesús; Davis Varghese – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2024
Informed scientific thinking is a vital component of engaging all socioscientific issues (SSI) such as climate change and the COVID-19 pandemic. However, socioscientific engagement may be influenced by sociocultural factors and mis/disinformation efforts to the widespread detriment of human and environmental well-being. The purpose of this…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Undergraduate Students, Beliefs, Misinformation
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Donna Chu; Frankie Ho Chun Wong – Journal of Education, 2024
This paper discusses the factors affecting the behaviours for coping with fake news among young people. The data were collected from a survey conducted in late 2019, which sampled 2112 secondary school students from 21 partnering schools. This study aims to understand the opinions and behaviours of teenagers towards disinformation when fake news…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students, Student Behavior, News Media
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Streveler, Ruth A. – Advances in Engineering Education, 2022
Engineering educators strive to help students understand concepts that may be difficult and counterintuitive. This often entails helping students bring their understanding of how a phenomenon works into alignment with the scientifically-accepted explanation. For the most part, fostering conceptual change has been thought of as a process of…
Descriptors: Misinformation, Concept Formation, Engineering Education, Psychological Patterns
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Paris, Britt; Reynolds, Rebecca; Marcello, Gina – Information and Learning Sciences, 2022
Purpose: This paper aims to address some limitations in existing approaches to the study of mis- and dis-information and offers what the authors propose as a more comprehensive approach to framing and studying these issues, geared toward the undergraduate level of learner. In doing so, the authors prioritize social shaping of technology and…
Descriptors: Misinformation, Information Literacy, Undergraduate Students, Media Literacy
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Arif Nugroho; Erna Andriyanti; Pratomo Widodo; Ira Mutiaraningrum – Innovations in Education and Teaching International, 2025
This study aims to explore the students' experience with ChatGPT in providing scaffolding for writing essays. It also discloses students' appraisals of utilising ChatGPT. Drawing upon data from semi-structured interviews, this study involved 12 students learning English as a Foreign Language who utilised ChatGPT in academic writing classes. The…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Artificial Intelligence, Synchronous Communication, Computer Software
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José Carlos Casas-Rosal; Carmen León-Mantero; David Gutiérrez-Rubio; Orlando Arencibia – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2025
Critical thinking is a skill that people must develop to navigate skillfully the information they receive through media channels. The cultivation of this skill must begin in the early stages of education and continue uninterrupted through the completion of academic training. For this reason, the search for tools to promote critical thinking in the…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Preservice Teachers, Teacher Education Curriculum, Critical Thinking
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Josef Buchner – Technology, Knowledge and Learning, 2025
The spread of fake news poses a global challenge to society, as this deliberately false information reduce trust in democracy, manipulate opinions, and negatively affect people's health. Educational research and practice must address this issue by developing and evaluating solutions to counter fake news. A promising approach in this regard is the…
Descriptors: Physical Environment, Simulated Environment, Synthesis, Information Technology
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