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Teaching information skills effectively

Curriculum planning and assignment design resources to help facilitate information skills learning.

Credible sources can vary radically

Classroom instructors can set up learners for success in the research and writing process when they give learners a clear sense of what constitutes "credible" and "authoritative" in a specific course (and for a specific assignment). Context (and, to some degree, privilege) determines what's valid, appropriate, authoritative. We oversimplify (and behave inauthentically) when we suggest evaluating sources is anything short of complicated.

Sample lessons and learning activities:

Sample assignment prompts:

  • Jekyll & Hyde, Holmes & Watson (a very different compare/contrast prompt)
    • Compare and contrast two categories of sources on the same topic (e.g., newspaper versus scholarly article; blog versus tweet). But rather than asking students to compare and contrast the viewpoints, use the similarities and differences to clarify and reinforce how "credible" plays out in the context of the specific course. For example, when is a newspaper's discussion more fitting than a scholarly article? 

Support for planning info skills teaching