Inquiry and research: listening, speaking, reading, writing, and thinking using multiple texts. The student engages in both short-term and sustained recursive inquiry processes for a variety of purposes.
Knowledge and Skills Statement
As a class, develop a set of questions to be used in identifying reliability when reviewing sources. Then, provide a set of articles of interest and ask students to work in small groups to use the questions to determine whether each article is reliable. Have groups share their observations with the class, using evidence to support their responses. Document student responses to record their level of understanding. Repeat this exercise for credibility and for bias.
Further Explanation
Students should understand that they need to evaluate certain elements, such as the author, sources or citations, bias or point of view, and date of publication to determine the reliability, credibility, and bias. This skill is introduced in sixth grade and each element should be assessed independently to determine students’ level of understanding of each.
Research
Christensen,-Branum, L. Strong, A. and Jones, C. O. (2018). Mitigating myside bias in argumentation. Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 62(4),
Summary: Teachers can improve students’ argumentation proficiency by intentionally addressing myside bias, the propensity to support arguments with which one preemptively agrees while selectively ignoring contradictory claims and evidence. In this article, the authors identify three themes detected in a review of the literature on myside bias and offer instructional implications and strategies to address myside bias in secondary and postsecondary classrooms. Such strategies that promote critical reflection and balanced argument have implications for academic achievement and critical thinking skills beyond the classroom.