4.4 Article

Lateral Reading on the Open Internet: A District-Wide Field Study in High School Government Classes

Journal

JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 114, Issue 5, Pages 893-909

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/edu0000740

Keywords

media literacy; digital literacy; civic education

Funding

  1. Google.org

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This study examines the effectiveness of an intervention aimed at teaching high school students to make informed decisions on the Internet. The results show that less than 6 hours of classroom instruction significantly improved students' ability to evaluate the credibility of online sources. These findings are crucial for preparing young people to make wise decisions in the digital age.
Educational Impact and Implications Statement This study tested the effectiveness of an intervention that taught high school students to make sound decisions on the Internet. Less than 6 hr of classroom instruction significantly improved students' judgment about the credibility of online sources. 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 attention in the site at hand. Professional development was provided to high school teachers who then implemented six 50-minute lessons in a district-mandated government course. Using a matched control design, students in treatment classrooms (n = 271) were compared to peers (n = 228) in regular classrooms. A multilevel linear mixed model showed that students in experimental classrooms grew significantly in their ability to judge the credibility of digital content. These findings inform efforts to prepare young people to make wise decisions about the information that darts across their screens.

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