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12 February 2021 Sorting Fact from Fiction: Media Literacy in the Biology Classroom
Molly Proudfit
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Abstract

The purpose of the proposed lesson is to help students develop media literacy skills, which are necessary across the curriculum and in students' everyday lives. Students will do so by evaluating a provided conspiracy theory and, later, a pseudoscience claim (alternatively, students may supply either material). In order to thoroughly evaluate the claim, students will generate and answer media literacy questions, with instructor or peer support as needed. Once students have practiced using the media literacy questions to evaluate the conspiracy theory, they will progress to more challenging material, such as a pseudoscience claim about a fad diet. Finally, the instructor may choose to extend the lesson to allow students time to apply their media literacy skills to a curricular pseudoscience claim, perhaps regarding climate change or the efficacy of vaccines. To complete the lesson, students will reflect on the content of the claims, why the misinformation matters, and the process of evaluating the material to draw appropriate conclusions.

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Molly Proudfit "Sorting Fact from Fiction: Media Literacy in the Biology Classroom," The American Biology Teacher 82(8), 542-544, (12 February 2021). https://doi.org/10.1525/abt.2020.82.8.542
Published: 12 February 2021
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KEYWORDS
climate change
Inquiry
media literacy
nature of science
pseudoscience
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