News literacy : the keys to combating fake news / Michelle Luhtala and Jacquelyn Whiting.
"The focus on fake news, "alternative facts," and general media mendacity distracts us from a very real educational challenge: teaching students the skills and dispositions that make them careful and thorough researchers. This is hard work, nd there are no easy recipes to facilitate the process. However, with carefully scaffolded lessons that nurture students to become increasingly savvy inquirers, readers, and writers, librarians and content area educators can help students meet these challenges and become informed, active citizens"-- Provided by publisher.
This book explains the difficulty in nurturing students to become critical researchers and offers practical lessons that empower students to excavate information that will help them learn. This guide to teaching news literacy explores a wealth of resources and classroom-tested lessons that educators in grades 7-12 can use in their own libraries and classrooms and explains the steps of the inquiry and research process in detail.
Record details
- ISBN: 9781440861529
- ISBN: 1440861528
- Physical Description: vi, 173 pages : illustrations ; 26 cm
- Publisher: Santa Barbara, California : Libraries Unlimited, an imprint of ABC-CLIO-LLC, [2018]
- Copyright: ©2018
Content descriptions
Bibliography, etc. Note: | Includes bibliographical references (pages 163-165) and index. |
Formatted Contents Note: | Introduction to news literacy -- A brief history of disinformation -- What the research says about students' media literacy -- Echo chambers, filter bubbles, and likes, oh my! -- The stages of research : a model -- Lessons for developing information literacy -- Citations are a tool for source evaluation -- Big takeaways -- A longer unit of study -- Rubrics. |
Search for related items by subject
Subject: | Information literacy. Fake news. Mass media > Objectivity. Electronic information resource literacy. Internet literacy. Press > Influence. Media literacy > Study and teaching. |
Available copies
- 1 of 1 copy available at Kirtland Community College.
Holds
- 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location | Call Number / Copy Notes | Barcode | Shelving Location | Status | Due Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kirtland Community College Library | P 96 .M4 L84 2018 | 30775305543739 | General Collection | Available | - |
News Literacy : The Keys to Combating Fake News
Click an element below to view details:
Table of Contents
News Literacy : The Keys to Combating Fake News
Section | Section Description | Page Number |
---|---|---|
1 | Introduction to News Literacy | p. 1 |
2 | A Brief History of Disinformation | p. 5 |
3 | What the Research Says about Students' Media Literacy | p. 9 |
4 | Echo Chambers, Filter Bubbles, and Likes, Oh My! | p. 17 |
Do Your Students Know There Is a Problem? | p. 17 | |
The Age of the Citizen Journalist | p. 18 | |
5 | The Stages of Research: A Model | p. 21 |
Wonder | p. 22 | |
Investigate | p. 23 | |
Synthesize | p. 24 | |
Express | p. 27 | |
Review | p. 28 | |
6 | Lessons for Developing Information Literacy | p. 33 |
Developing Research Questions | p. 33 | |
Lesson 1 | Question Stems | p. 34 |
Lesson 2 | The QFT | p. 38 |
Lesson 3 | What Is My Bias? | p. 41 |
Lesson 4 | Primary Source Close Reading | p. 45 |
Lesson 5 | Text, Context, and Subtext in Primary Sources | p. 48 |
Lesson 6 | Agree and Disagree with Primary Source Authors | p. 57 |
Lesson 7 | What Is This Source? | p. 60 |
Lesson 8 | Source Evaluation | p. 65 |
Lesson 9 | Which Source Does the Job? | p. 71 |
Lesson 10 | How Can Two Writers Reach Such Different Conclusions? | p. 72 |
Lesson 11 | Editorials, Op-Eds, and Blogs, Oh My! | p. 75 |
Lesson 12 | Reading for Editorial Bias | p. 76 |
Lesson 13 | Not All Editorials Are Essays | p. 78 |
Lesson 14 | Opinion in Many Forms | p. 79 |
Lesson 15 | Parody and Satire | p. 80 |
Lesson 16 | Propaganda, Hoaxes, and Other Forms of Manipulation | p. 82 |
Lesson 17 | Analysis of Social Media as a Tool for Persuasion | p. 85 |
Lesson 18 | Fact-Checkers | p. 89 |
Lesson 19 | Anatomy of a Stump Speech | p. 92 |
Lesson 20 | Unpacking a Visual Text-Paintings | p. 93 |
Lesson 21 | Unpacking a Visual Text-Photographs | p. 95 |
Lesson 22 | Building Capacities for Critical Thinking by Fostering Empathy | p. 98 |
Lesson 23 | Branding and Advertising | p. 101 |
Lesson 24 | Expose the Trail | p. 104 |
Lesson 25 | Protection by the First Amendment | p. 107 |
Lesson 26 | Media Watch | p. 110 |
Overcoming Student Resistance to Close Reading | p. 112 | |
7 | Citations Are a Tool for Source Evaluation | p. 115 |
Appendix 7A | Bibliography Feedback Comment Bank | p. 121 |
Appendix 7B | MLA 8 Self-Guided Instruction-Checks | p. 127 |
Appendix 7C | Bibliography Quiz | p. 133 |
Appendix 7D | Bibliography Checkbric | p. 134 |
8 | Big Takeaways | p. 137 |
9 | A Longer Unit of Study | p. 143 |
Unit 1 | Should I Share This? | p. 143 |
Unit 2 | How Can Something Be Both Biased and Meaningful? | p. 144 |
Unit 3 | Why Can't I Separate the Medium from the Message? | p. 145 |
Unit 4 | Problem-Based Learning: How Can I Use Digital Media for Good? | p. 147 |
10 | Rubrics | p. 149 |
Works Cited | p. 163 | |
Index | p. 167 |