Saturday, May 4, 2019

Weeks 6-9: Finishing Up



Weeks 6-8

  • Work on Group Presentations

Assignment:


News Evaluation Presentation

For this assignment, you will work together as a group. Each group should have approximately five students. You will use Twitter, a social media tool and follow news organizations. You will find news stories to evaluate and you will use the knowledge that you have gained related to source evaluation and deconstructing a source to evaluate ten news stories. You will then choose four news stories from this bunch to discuss and deconstruct via a PowerPoint presentation. Your presentation will make use of evaluation criteria outlined in the book Web Literacy for Student Fact Checkers. You will provide two examples of “fake news” and two examples of stories that you have deemed “authoritative” and provide a rationale.
  • Each presentation must include:
  • Fifteen to twenty minutes of presentation time
  • Visual aids such as Google Slides or PowerPoint material uploaded to D2L
  • Participation in roughly equal measure by each group member (Please fill out group participation survey)
  • Well-supported argument providing a rationale for the group judgments of their chosen articles as either authoritative or “fake news”
  • Additional context to support your decision, including evidence of additional research via your annotations and snapshots included with your presentation

Week 9

  • Upload presentations for grading

Week 5: Verifying Twitter Identity

Week 5 


Open Here

Week 4: Reading Laterally


Week 4 Tasks:


Discussion Prompt 2: Filter Bubbles

Watch the video Beware Online "filter bubbles"


In 3-4 paragraphs discuss:


1. What is a "filter bubble"?



2. What problems do you think the filter bubble may pose?

3. Look at The Wall Street Journal's Blue Feed, Red Feed Side by Side comparison of liberal and conservative Facebook. What do you notice? 

4. Look at your Social Media feed. What websites and suggestions do you see? What is being advertised to you? 

5. Think of a subject that is important to you. If you were to perform a search to find more information about this topic, what would you use, and where would you search?

6. Respond to two of your peers’ comments. 

When composing your response, title your response: LastNameFirstInitial_FilterBubble

Start a new thread in D2L.

TED. (2011). Beware online “filter bubbles” |Eli Pariser. Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B8ofWFx525s

Week 3: Go Upstream

Tasks for Week 3:           

Students will view the Sway: Fake News Tools & Tutorials
Go To This Sway
Download the necessary tools and install them
    1. Fake News 1:https://hypothes.is/groups/x3y3jjQn/fakenews1
    2. Fake News 2:https://hypothes.is/groups/dEgdWLjp/fakenews2
    3. Fake News 3:https://hypothes.is/groups/ziVmDN4W/fakenews3
    4. Fake News 4:https://hypothes.is/groups/D1ZWekmz/fakenews4

Week 2: Exploring Confirmation Bias


Exploring Confirmation Bias

Tasks for this week:


Discussion Prompt 1: Confirmation Bias


Watch the video "Why Do Our Brains Love Fake News?"  


In 2-3 paragraphs address the following:

1. Define "cognitive bias."
2. What are the five types of cognitive bias?  
3. What do people do when they experience confirmation bias?  
4. What are the steps that you can use to recognize cognitive bias in yourself?
5. Respond to two of your peers’ comments.  
  • When composing your response, title your response: LastNameFirstInitial_FilterBubble
  • Start a new thread in D2L
Why Do Our Brains Love Fake News? (2017). Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dNmwvntMF5A&feature=youtu.be

Week 1: Strategies for Evaluating the News


Week 1:

Video above by Dana Casper, based on:

Caulfield, M. (2017). Web Literacy for Student Fact Checkers. In Web Literacy for Student Fact-Checkers. Retrieved from https://webliteracy.pressbooks.com/front-matter/web-strategies-for-student-fact-checkers/

Monday, April 22, 2019

Lesson Plan



Title: “Post-Truth: Fake News and How to Spot It ”


2. Subject Area:


Information Literacy/ Media Literacy

3. Grade Level:

Higher Education/ Undergraduate

4. Description of your target learners (e.g., learner characteristics):


Undergraduate/ Higher Education/ Freshman-Senior level. Target learners are composed of both male and female students. Students are represented in traditional and non-traditional age groups. Students are familiar with internet research and have a basic understanding of social media.

5. Prerequisite Knowledge:

Students are familiar with the operation of a computer and with social media applications. Students understand the basic concepts of search strategy and have performed some online research.

6. Learning Objectives: 

  • At the conclusion of this activity students will be able to use Web 2.0 tools to curate and annotate Five news stories
  • At the conclusion of this activity, students will demonstrate the ability to differentiate between sources of various levels of credibility found on Social Media

7. Curriculum and Technology Standards:

ISTE Standards

  • 3a: Students plan and employ effective research strategies to locate information and other resources for their intellectual or creative pursuits.
  • 3b: Students evaluate the accuracy, perspective, credibility and relevance of information, media, data or other resources.
  • 3c: Students curate information from digital resources using a variety of tools and methods to create collections of artifacts that demonstrate meaningful connections or conclusions.

ACRL Framework for Information Literacy:



Frame: Authority is Constructed and Contextual
  • Students will define different types of authority, such as subject expertise (e.g., scholarship), societal position (e.g., public office or title), or special experience (e.g., participating in a historic event);
  • Students will use research tools and indicators of authority to determine the credibility of sources, understanding the elements that might temper this credibility
  • Frame: Information Has Value
  • Students will give credit to the original ideas of others through proper attribution and citation
  • Frame: Searching As Strategic Exploration
  • determine the initial scope of the task required to meet their information needs;
  • match information needs and search strategies to appropriate search tools;
  • design and refine needs and search strategies as necessary, based on search results;
  • manage searching processes and results effectively

8. Learning Activities (e.g., length of the lesson, concepts covered, learning procedure…) 


  • Students will watch a brief video that teaches them how to use hypothes.is
  • Students will be provided with supplemental material that shows them how to use Google Slides
  • Students will be provided with a digital copy of the text Web Literacy for Student Fact Checkers
  • Students will be separated into groups, and each group will evaluate the credibility of Five articles found on social media.
  • Students will sign up for social media accounts on Twitter.
  • Students will monitor Twitter and for news stories Students will determine the authoritativeness of an online news source found on a social media website.
  • Students will use a bookmarking tool, Hypothes.is, to bookmark articles from Twitter.
  • Students will download and install Jing and use it to create snapshots of their five chosen articles.
  • Using a system of evaluation, students will be able to determine the authoritativeness of an online news source found on a social media website.
  • Using the criteria that they have learned in the course of the class, they will provide a rationale for their determination of credibility.
  • Students will record an online presentation and upload it to the Discussion board in D2L
  • Students will provide two comments for each posted video, responding to reflection questions.

9. The Web 2.0 tool chosen to deliver the lesson (e.g., technology Integration):



10. Assessment(s) used to measure learning outcomes through the lesson: 

  • A rubric to evaluate their group presentation and reflections
  • A rubric to evaluate their contribution to the discussion board

Sunday, March 10, 2019

Introduction





Introduction


The purpose of this Distance Education project is to teach students about evaluating news sources. The learning concepts covered are media literacy and information literacy. The key learning objectives are as follows:
  • At the conclusion of this activity students will be able to use Web 2.0 tools to curate and annotate Five news stories
  • At the conclusion of this activity, students will demonstrate the ability to differentiate between sources of various levels of credibility found on Social Media
The lesson is intended to be used in a Higher Education setting, preferably with Undergraduates.  Prerequisite knowledge that would be useful for students as they undertake these activities are:
  • Familiarity with social media (particularly Facebook and Twitter)
  • Familiarity with online research 
  • Familiarity with Blackboard/ D2L 
  • Familiarity with Google Slides
As a part of this project we will be using the text Web Literacy for Student Fact Checkers by Mike Caulfield. 

The tools that will be used as a part of this project are:


  • Hypothes.is : You will use this to annotate live on the web
  • Follow the instructions to Sign up for a Hypothesis Account and install the plug-in. Hypothes.is works best with Google Chrome
  • Twitter : You will use this to find news stories to evaluate
  • Jing: You will use this to take screenshots
  • Google Slides: You will use either this or PowerPoint to create your presentation


Introduction

Introduction The purpose of this Distance Education project is to teach students about evaluating news sources. The learning con...