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Wineburg, Sam; Breakstone, Joel; McGrew, Sarah; Smith, Mark D.; Ortega, Teresa – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2022
In a study conducted across an urban school district, we tested a classroom-based intervention in which students were taught online evaluation strategies drawn from research with professional fact checkers. Students practiced the heuristic of "lateral reading": leaving an unfamiliar website to search the open Web before investing…
Descriptors: High School Students, Civics, Media Literacy, Digital Literacy
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McGrew, Sarah – Computers in the Schools, 2021
This study investigated how high school students evaluated online information on social and political topics. Eighteen juniors and seniors, at a school that attempts to leverage technology to personalize learning, thought aloud as they completed online reasoning tasks. Three themes emerged from analyses of think-aloud data. First, students…
Descriptors: Information Sources, Information Literacy, Evaluative Thinking, Web Sites
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McGrew, Sarah – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2022
This study investigated an approach to teaching students to evaluate online information in the context of a high school history class. Over the course of a semester, I collaborated with a teacher to teach and refine a series of eight lessons focused on "civic online reasoning." We aimed to use students' historical reading as a bridge to…
Descriptors: United States History, History Instruction, Teaching Methods, Civics
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McGrew, Sarah; Smith, Mark; Breakstone, Joel; Ortega, Teresa; Wineburg, Sam – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 2019
Background: Young people increasingly turn to the Internet for information about social and political issues. However, they struggle to evaluate the trustworthiness of the information they encounter online. Aims: This pilot study investigated whether a focused curricular intervention could improve university students' ability to make sound…
Descriptors: College Students, Internet, Information Sources, Credibility
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McGrew, Sarah; Byrne, Virginia L. – Journal of Research on Technology in Education, 2021
Prior research suggests that high school students often struggle to evaluate online content; however, with support, they can learn to conduct more effective digital evaluations. This study extends our understanding of how students attend to the source of online information and the role instruction may play in changing students' evaluation of…
Descriptors: High School Students, Adolescents, Users (Information), Information Literacy
Breakstone, Joel; McGrew, Sarah; Smith, Mark; Ortega, Teresa; Wineburg, Sam – Phi Delta Kappan, 2018
In recent years--and especially since the 2016 presidential election--numerous media organizations, newspapers, and policy advocates have made efforts to help Americans become more careful consumers of the information they see online. In K-12 and higher education, the main approach has been to provide students with checklists they can use to…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Technological Literacy, Check Lists, Elementary Secondary Education
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McGrew, Sarah; Breakstone, Joel; Ortega, Teresa; Smith, Mark; Wineburg, Sam – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2018
To be an informed citizen in today's information-rich environment, individuals must be able to evaluate information they encounter on the Internet. However, teachers currently have limited options if they want to assess students' evaluations of digital content. In response, we created a range of short tasks that assess students' "civic online…
Descriptors: Information Sources, Internet, Computer Software, Student Attitudes