Student Learning Activity: Evaluate a variety of sources for the ethical and logical uses of evidence.
Skills: The purpose of this activity is to help you practice the following skills essential to your success in school and beyond.
In this activity you will:
S. 2. Use research tools to determine the credibility of the author;
S. 3. Recognize that information may be packaged formally or informally and may include sources of all media types.
Knowledge: This activity will also help you become familiar with the following important content knowledge:
K.1 Motivation to find authoritative sources, recognizing that authority may be conferred or manifested in unexpected ways;
K.2. Develop awareness of the importance of assessing content with a skeptical stance.
Student Learning Activity: Evaluate a variety of sources for the ethical and logical uses of evidence.
Directions for activity:
Student Learning Activity: Evaluate a variety of sources for the ethical and logical uses of evidence.
Skills: The purpose of this activity is to help you practice the following skills essential to your success in school and beyond.
In this activity you will:
S. 2. Understand that many disciplines have acknowledged authorities and some scholars may challenge these authorities;
S. 3. Recognize that authoritative content may be packaged formally or informally and may include sources of all media types.
Knowledge: This activity will also help you become familiar with the following important content knowledge:
K.1. Motivation to find authoritative sources, recognizing that authority may be conferred or manifested in unexpected ways;
K.2. Develop awareness of the importance of assessing content with a skeptical stance.
This lesson is intended as a single session within a major’s research methods course. Rather than using a shorter “scholarly vs. non-scholarly” comparison worksheet, this activity asks students to work in groups to systematically examine a scholarly article in depth, identify and evaluate its various components visually and in writing, and then compare it to a non-scholarly article on the same topic. Groups then report back to the entire class. Discussion is guided so as to touch on the processes by which sources are created, what these methods say about their authority, and to consider contextually appropriate uses for them.
Lesson Outline/Procedure:
Time |
Activity |
5 minutes |
Set up
|
5 minutes |
Introduce the process
|
30-40 minutes |
Scholarly Autopsy Activity
|
20-30 minutes |
Report Back
Note: The above process must be adapted to fit with the number of groups constituted and the example articles used. |
Assessment:
Credit: Krista Bowers Sharpe Western Illinois University Libraries 4/26/2017