|
|
The views expressed on this page are
solely
those of the author and do not
necessarily represent the views of County
News Online
|
Pixabay
Education Dive
News literacy critical as students face national 'infodemic'
Twitter flagging the president’s tweets is another example of how
students are “inheriting an information ecosystem that has unfolded in
ways we never imagined,” experts say.
Linda Jacobson
June 3, 2020
When Michelle Chikaonda decided to volunteer at a meal distribution
site in West Philadelphia, she didn’t know she’d soon be helping teens
sort through the vast mounds of information in the media about the
coronavirus.
But she said she had been thinking about how students are also
experiencing an “infodemic,” and that misinformation is “coming quicker
than the truth.”
As a former mentor for Mighty Writers — a nonprofit after-school
program that runs the meal site — Chikaonda was tapped to teach a
“Conspiracy Outbreak” class, over Zoom, in which students are looking
beyond headlines and examining their own beliefs.
“I asked them to write everything they knew about the coronavirus and how they knew it,” she said.
In one discussion, a student said she didn’t believe that
philanthropist Bill Gates was really developing a vaccine for COVID-19,
while another said his foundation’s work to eradicate malaria suggests
he has resources to bring a vaccine to the market.
The students, she said, are learning “any argument can seem like a good argument if you have enough reason behind it.”
‘An information ecosystem’
The demand for programs that teach students to think critically about
what they read or view — and to understand the purpose behind the
message — began to spread following the “fake news” phenomenon of the
2016 presidential election. And now with the pandemic, news and media
literacy organizations are adding lesson plans and resources related to
COVID-19.
The growing debate over how social media companies respond to posts
from President Donald Trump and other public officials only contributes
to the need for students to “determine what is fact and fiction in the
information they consume, share and act on,” Alan Miller, founder and
CEO of the nonprofit News Literacy Project, said in a statement last
week.
“This is a very important issue that grows more pressing each day and
is only amplified by the current pandemic and the upcoming U.S.
presidential election,” he said. “Young people are inheriting an
information ecosystem that has unfolded in ways we never imagined, and
thus it is imperative for us to provide guidance on how these platforms
should be used.”
Regarding the pandemic, NLP has incorporated a variety of COVID-related
topics into its Checkology program and addressed conspiracies related
to the pandemic on its newsletter for teachers. And Project Look Sharp,
based at Ithaca College in New York, has also added new lessons on
topics ranging from proper handwashing for elementary school students
to confirmation bias and this year’s presidential campaign for high
school and college students.
“Teachers are overwhelmed, and we’ve seen broad interest and growing
interest across the board,” said Christopher Sperry, the director of
curriculum and staff development for Project Look Sharp, who also
taught social studies for 35 years.
Peter Barash, who teaches 7th and 8th grade social studies in the
Chicago Public Schools, chose a Checkology module for students after
schools closed because there was a gap in time before formal remote
instruction began.
His students have used news sources to compare COVID-19 to the 1918 flu
pandemic and examined data on the impact of the disease in different
countries to “develop a relative sense of where the U.S. was at that
time,” he said. “This helped them understand that numbers out of
context do not tell the entire story.”
They also analyzed different visualizations of the data. “Their work
focused on understanding why the graphs might be misleading without
more information,” he said. “For example, we talked about how more or
less testing would change the graphs.”
Media literacy principles became even more relevant to the students
this week as they watched protests and violence break out across the
country.
"Kids are on a Google Meet fact-checking as the class goes on, bringing
in new info to corroborate what they had heard and were distinguishing
between what they knew as fact related to the killing of Mr. Floyd
versus what they had heard, but could not verify," Barash says. "The
past few days have made the need for media literacy and bias
investigation so essential for American youth."
‘Habits of mind’
While several states are beginning to require schools to include media
literacy in curriculum, educators note that because it fits into
multiple content areas, it can also be pushed aside.
“Our orientation is that there are habits of thinking, habits of mind
that get spoken to in all the standards,” Sperry said. “Our work has
been to figure out the ways that are most accessible, and teach what
[teachers] need to teach, but do it through a media literacy approach.”
In New York, the social studies curriculum in recent years has shifted
more toward an emphasis on skills, such as analysis, and less on
memorizing facts and events, explained Mary Kate Lonergan, an 8th grade
teacher at Eagle Hill Middle School in the Fayetteville-Manlius School
District.
That allows media and news literacy to be “the heartbeat of my
curriculum,” she said. “It’s the vehicle through which we engage our
content.”
When schools closed, her students were about to finish a unit on the
Great Depression, with the “driving question” being whether it’s the
responsibility of the government to help people in need.
With “literal hours to prep” for teaching remotely, Lonergan decided to
situate the question in the current economic crisis and have students
consider whether it’s the government’s role to help those who are
unemployed. Students viewed sources such as The New York Times and CNN
to do a “media decoding,” but Lonergan notes that in an asynchronous
format, such issues are tough to teach.
“You don’t want to lead them toward misinformation,” she said, adding
while 8th-graders might be skilled at looking for evidence, they
haven’t always learned to question the evidence.
Using Project Look Sharp’s lesson on whether to trust web videos
related to the coronavirus, she had students view two videos — one was
a Jim Bakker show plugging silver products as a cure and the other was
an official White House coronavirus task force press conference.
Lonergan said educators sometimes question whether media literacy
lessons lead to “raising a bunch of cynics.” That’s why, she adds, it’s
important to take a “do no harm” approach and balance discussions with
sources that are reliable and trustworthy.
“It is a confusing and overwhelming information landscape,” she said. “It’s tough to navigate for adults, let alone teens.”
In Philadelphia, the students in Chikaonda’s after-school group have
also discussed competing theories over masks. She divided them up into
two groups to argue in favor of the position they were least likely to
hold themselves.
She said there was a “nice moment” when the students began asking each
other about their viewpoints. “As a teacher, you feel like you’ve done
your done your job if they start learning from each other.”
|
|
|
|