Description |
vi, 173 pages : illustrations ; 26 cm |
Summary |
"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. |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 163-165) and index. |
Contents |
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. |
Subject |
Information literacy.
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Fake news.
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Mass media -- Objectivity.
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Electronic information resource literacy.
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Internet literacy.
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Press -- Influence.
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Media literacy -- Study and teaching.
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Media literacy -- Study and teaching. (OCoLC)fst01013579
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Press -- Influence.
(OCoLC)fst01075854
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Added Author |
Whiting, Jacquelyn, author.
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Other Form: |
Online version: Luhtala, Michelle. News literacy. Santa Barbara, California : Libraries Unlimited, 2018 9781440861536 (DLC) 2018050463 (OCoLC)1034724480 |
ISBN |
9781440861529 (pbk.) |
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1440861528 (pbk.) |
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9781440861536 (ebook) |
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1440861536 (ebook) |
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