4.4 Article

Promoting secondary school students' evaluation of source features of multiple documents

Journal

CONTEMPORARY EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 38, Issue 3, Pages 180-195

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.cedpsych.2013.03.003

Keywords

Source evaluation; Multiple-documents reading; Contrasting-cases intervention

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The current research examined whether instructional activities centering on contrasting cases promoted secondary school students' evaluations of source features present in a multiple-documents inquiry context. Two hypothetical students' document evaluation strategy protocols were designed: One featured more sophisticated strategies commonly enacted by experts and better college students and a second featured less sophisticated strategies commonly enacted by secondary school students. A series of classroom-based activities required that students compare/contrast the two protocols to decide which were the best strategies when analyzing multiple scientific documents and why. The findings demonstrated that students who previously participated in the intervention activities included more scientific concepts from more useful documents when generating essay responses from memory, displayed better rankings of the usefulness of the set of multiple documents, and offered more principled justifications based on source feature evaluations of trustworthiness compared to students who instead received typical classroom instruction. We discuss the instructional implications of a contrasting-cases approach in facilitating secondary school students' usage of source features within multiple-documents inquiry contexts. (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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