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5/22/2018
1
Developing Digital Citizens: Resources
and Strategies
TSLAC WebinarMay 2018
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Introduction – Sarah Morris
• Librarian and curriculum designer
•Co-Founder of Nucleus Learning Network, an Austin-based education nonprofit
•Former museum educator with a focus on STEM and digital and media literacy
Introduction – Liz Philippi
• School Librarian for 30+ years
• School Program Coordinator for the Texas State Library
• Works with librarians on the new standards
• Over the TexQuest K-12 resources
• Presenter and speaker
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Get in touch!
Sarah Morris Contact Information:
512-495-4107
Liz Philippi Contact Information:
512-463-5852 (work)
281-814-5125 (cell)
Word Association: Share the first thing that comes to mind when you hear
“fake news”
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Word Association: Share the first thing that comes to mind when you hear
“media literacy”
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Word Association: Share the first thing that comes to mind when you hear
“digital citizenship”
https://unsplash.com/photos/c1ZN57GfDB0Photo credit https://unsplash.com/photos/c1ZN57GfDB0
https://www.flickr.com/photos/wfryer/39501087882 Flickr Wesley Fryer
Background: Fake News and Misinformation
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Types of Misinformation
FirstDraft 7 Types of Mis and Disinformation. https://firstdraftnews.com/misinfo-types-uk-election/ Used with permission from MisInfoCon conference https://misinfocon.com/
Types of Misinformation
Digital Forensic Research Lab identifies three types:• Fake News: “deliberately presenting false information as news”• Disinformation: “deliberately spreading false information”• Misinformation: “the unintentional spreading of false information”
Source: https://medium.com/dfrlab/fake-news-defining-and-defeating-43830a2ab0af
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News Consumption Habits
Studies on where people get their news from, their internet usage habits, and how people feel about media:
PEW Surveys: http://www.journalism.org/2016/07/07/pathways-to-news/
http://www.journalism.org/2017/09/07/news-use-across-social-media-platforms-2017/
Knight Foundation:
https://medium.com/trust-media-and-democracy/10-reasons-why-americans-dont-trust-the-media-d0630c125b9e
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Literacies, Standards, and Curriculum
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Media Literacy
Skills and competencies that help people combat misinformation • Understand information ecosystems • Find credible information • Evaluate information • Synthesize and use information effectively • Use tools to create and share information • Keep information secure
Media literacy can empower people with the skills they need to consume, produce, and distribute information
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Information Literacy and Multiple Literacies
• Information literacy has a lot in common with media literacy
• Looking at multiple literacies that intersect and help people develop future ready skills
• Literacies: media, information, technology, news, digital, science, etc.
• Core goals of helping students become strong digital citizens and develop skills in finding, consuming, using, and creating information
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Digital Storytelling
https://www.flickr.com/photos/langwitches/4342696757
Photo credit Langwitches
https://www.flickr.com/photos/langwitches/4342696757
Photo credit Danah Longley ttps://www.flickr.com/photos/danahlongley/4472897115
Photo credit https://www.flickr.com/photos/langwitches/4780666564
Mozilla’s Web Literacy and Internet Health Report can act as frames for thinking about the connections between these literacies and subjects like computer science
Mozilla’s Web Literacy
https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/internet-health/ and https://learning.mozilla.org/en-US/web-literacy
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Subject Connections - CS
Important to understand the following: • how technology is used to create and distribute information• how technology shapes our information ecosystems• how technology mediates our experiences encountering news and information
Computer science can help people better understand how news and information are created, and help people better create and share things online themselves
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Subject Connections - Civics, English, History
• Applying skills and topics from these subject areas in helping students develop as digital citizens and develop skills across multiple literacies
• Emphasis on research, close reading, analytical skills, writing and communicating skills, synthesizing materials, etc.
• Understanding how multiple literacies and digital citizenship fit into broader social and political contexts
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Mission: Information Curriculum
https://nucleus-network.github.io/missioninfo/
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• AASL• B. Think-IV. Curate: Learners gather information appropriate to the task by
• C. Share-IV. Curate: Learners exchange information resources within and
beyond their learning community by
• D. Grow-IV. Curate: Learners select and organize information for a variety of
audiences by
• A. Think-VI. Engage: Learners follow ethical and legal guidelines for gathering
and using information by
• B. Think-VI. Engage: Learners use valid information and reasoned
conclusions to make ethical decisions in the creation of knowledge by
• C. Share-VI. Engage: Learners responsibly, ethically, and legally share new
information with a global community by
https://standards.aasl.org/
Standards Mapping
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• ACRL Framework for Information Literacy
• Authority is constructed and contextual
• Information creation as a process
• Information has value
• Research as inquiry
• Searching as strategic exploration
http://www.ala.org/acrl/standards/ilframework
Standards Mapping
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• TX School Library Standards
• Strand 1 - Information Literacy: School library programs offer
information literacy instruction that enables students to
efficiently locate, accurately evaluate, ethically use, and clearly
communicate information in various formats.
• Dimension 2: Learners and educators practice the ethical
and legal use of information; including transformative fair
use, intellectual freedom, information access, privacy,
proprietary rights, and validation of information as
approved in local policy EFA, federal law 1st Amendment,
and best library practice Library Bill of Rights.
Standards Mapping
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• TX School Library Standards• Strand 2 - Inquiry: School library programs provide access to
information for inquiry learning, which includes the pursuit, creation,
and sharing of knowledge, as well as support for both student and
professional learning.
• Dimension 2: The school library program includes a carefully
curated collection of current materials in a variety of formats,
including curation of open educational resources (OER) that are
uniquely suited to support inquiry learning and the needs and
interests of all users.
• Dimension 3: The school library program offers opportunities for
learners to explore real world problems by interacting with
relevant information in a variety of formats.
Standards Mapping
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• TX School Library Standards• Strand 4: Digital Learning - Effective school libraries are a vital hub with equitable
access to emerging technologies which provide curated and ope access to a
variety of print and digital resources. They support best instructional practices
and curriculum standards through the integration of resources while assessing
the impact on student learning.
• Dimension 5: The library program models and encourages the
understanding of federal, state, and local policies and procedures for
responsible use of digital tools.
• Dimension 6: The library encourages students to use digital intellectual
property responsibly, understand current copyright rules, make responsible
online decisions, understand the significance of a digital identity, and use
positive digital citizenship practices.
https://www.tsl.texas.gov/sites/default/files/public/tslac/ld/schoollibs/costforstandar
ds/Texas%20School%20Library%20Standards%20E-Version%20FINAL.pdf
Standards Mapping
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• TX ELAR TEKS - Middle School - Grades 6, 7, & 8
• 110.23b.6 - Response skills: - The student responds to an
increasingly challenging variety of sources that are read,
heard, or viewed.
• 110.23.b.9 - Author’s purpose and craft: - The student
uses critical inquiry to analyze the authors’ choices and
how they influence and communicate meaning within a
variety of texts.
• 110.23.b.12 - Inquiry and research: - The student engages
in both short-term and sustained recursive inquiry
processes for a variety of purposes.
Standards Mapping
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• TX ELAR TEKS - High School• 110.31.b.6 - Reading/Comprehension of Literary Text - Students understand,
make inferences & draw conclusions about the varied structural patterns &
features of literary nonfiction & provide evidence from text to support their
understanding.
• 110.31.b.9 - Reading/Comprehension of Informational Text/Expository Text.
Students analyze, make inferences & draw conclusions about expository text
and provide evidence from text to support their understanding.
• 110.31.b.12 - Reading/Media Literacy. Students use comprehension skills to
analyze how words, images, graphics, and sounds work together in various
forms to impact meaning.
• 110.31.b.20 - Research/Research Plan. Students ask open-ended research
questions and develop a plan for answering them.
Standards Mapping
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• TX ELAR TEKS - High School (continued)• 110.31.b.21 - Research/Gathering Sources. Students determine, locate, and
explore the full range of relevant sources addressing a research question and
systematically record the information they gather.
• 110.31.b.22 - Research/Synthesizing Information. Students clarify research
questions and evaluate and synthesize collected information.
• 110.31.b.23 - Research/Organizing and Presenting Ideas. Students organize
and present their ideas and information according to the purpose of the
research and their audience.
https://tea.texas.gov/Academics/Subject_Areas/English_Language_Arts_a
nd_Reading/English_Language_Arts_and_Reading/
Standards Mapping
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Fact Checking Lightning Rounds – show students memes, twitter screenshots, and headlines and give them increasingly reduced amounts of time to fact check on the fly
Source Analysis Round Robin - students analyze how a topic is covered across different types of media and media outlets
Mapping The News - Trace and map a fake news story, from its inception to how it spreads through various media, to the consequences.
Hackathon - Host a mini hackathon where kids can explore and design tools to combat misinformation – major push for fact checking apps and natural language processing tools
• Inspiration: http://www.smartchicagocollaborative.org/hackforchange/
• National Day of Civic Hacking: https://www.codeforamerica.org/events/national-day-of-civic-hacking-2017
Curriculum Ideas
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Share your ideas!What ideas do you have for
activities to try? How have you approached fake news and
misinformation in your teaching?
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Final thoughts and questions
“Students are technology literate when they come to Miller, but they are informationally illiterate.” Scott Hensley, Clark County Schools, Nevada
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See the slides and other resources at:https://goo.gl/yx3Bwr
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