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Teaching Information/Research Skills in Elementary School

This post title is “Teaching Information/Research Skills in Elementary School”, but this post is as much for adults and older students.

Many adults are overwhelmed with the quantity and new kind of media that is available and accessible through technology. Older students in High School and College might not feel overwhelmed, but have never been taught how to navigate, evaluate, save and retrieve the information that they are seeking.

problematic

How and what kind of information skills do we need to start teaching in elementary school, that will grow and expand with our students as their grow older?

What do teachers need to know in order to introduce and guide their students in a

  • critical
  • efficient
  • effectively
  • safe
  • ethical

way as they navigating through the sea of information available?

We need to help students develop these kind of information skills:

  • locating information
  • evaluating information
  • learning from information
  • using (remix) information

I have written a few blog posts in the past months trying to wrap my own understanding what and how we can teach information/reserach skills starting in elementary school.

I ran across what looks like an amazing resource to include in lessons.

All About Explorers

All About Explorers was developed by a group of teachers as a means of teaching students about the Internet. Although the Internet can be a tremendous resource for gathering information about a topic, we found that students often did not have the skills to discern useful information from worthless data.

So we set out to develop a series of lessons for elementary age students in which we would demonstrate that just because it is out there for the searching does not mean it is worthwhile.

The idea of creating a website and sprinkling in false information to make a point about

  • not everything you find online is true
  • you are responsible to verify with other sources the information you find
  • use common sense when you find information that sounds “too good/ too outrageous/ too odd to be true”

is well thought through.

Because we wanted to make a point about finding useless information even in a site which looked at first to be fairly well put together, all of the Explorer biographies here are fictional. While many of the facts are true or based on truth, many inaccuracies, lies, and even downright absurdity are mixed in indiscriminately.

http://allaboutexplorers.com/

All About Explorers | Everything you’ve ever wanted to know about every explorer who ever lived…and more! via kwout

Students are invited to join in on Explorer Treasure Hunts, that point them to the site’s information page for each explorer (sprinkled with false facts) and one other link (with correct facts..well as correct as historical “facts” can be). Students then are asked to answer questions and fill them in direclty on the website. The submit button prints the page out with the answers.

treasure-hunt-christopher-columbus

There is also an extensive list of downloadable lessons and worksheets the teachers have used in their classroom in conjunction with this information skills lesson.

  • Lesson 1: Just Because It’s Out There Doesn’t Mean It’s Good
    Students go on an Internet treasure hunt to find information about a famous world explorer. They compare information from two different sites to come to a conclusion about whether they can trust all Internet sources.
  • Lesson 2: So How Do You Find the Good Stuff?
    Students are taught about the difference between publishing a book and posting a web site, emphasizing the selectivity of the publishing process. The “1 – 2 – 3″ approach to researching on the Internet is introduced. Students then get a chance to try out the first two steps.
  • Lesson 3: Google, What?
    In this lesson, search engines are introduced in more detail. Emphasis is placed on the fact that these are collections rather than selections and that there are no humans involved in the collection process. Students explore some search engines to see the differences in results.
  • Lesson 4: Where Exactly Am I, Anyway?
    Students learn about how to decode a URL and that it is the address for locating a web page. They also learn how to begin evaluating a site based on the top level domain (e.g. .com, .org, or .edu), as well as a few other tricks for determining the quality of the site.
  • Lesson 5: How Could They Be So Wrong?
    Students research the correct facts and draft an email to the AllAboutExplorers site webmaster to fix the mistakes they discovered in Lesson 1.
  • Explorer WebQuest
    Students will apply what they’ve learned about Internet research to a real world project.
http://allaboutexplorers.com/webquest/webquest.html

Not only have the webmaster’s made available all the lesson plans, but they have also created a WebQuest for your students to complete. The student’s introduction is as follows:

Every year in our country, we celebrate many holidays. Several of those are in honor of famous and important people from our history, like Martin Luther King, George Washington, and Christopher Columbus. In this WebQuest you are going to find out more about an explorer your team chooses and about how and why we use holidays to honor them.

Who was this explorer? What is important to remember about him or her? How can you use a holiday celebration to tell his or her story well and communicate the important aspects of his or her life and accomplishments to the public?

Gerald Aungst, one of the webmasters of the site, was gracious enough to answer a few of my questions from his experience in developing and using  the site.

What grade levels are the lesson plans intended for?

The lessons are specifically targeted for our original audience of fourth and fifth grade students, but they could certainly be adapted down to second or third grade, and I have heard of middle school and high school teachers using the site as well.

What were some of the reactions when students found out that the information they found was wrong? Did some students not figure it out?

Reactions tend to vary. Some students start noticing “weird” things in the biographies, such as references to cell phones, and it dawns on them that there might be something odd going on. Other students plow ahead, copying information happily from the site. We always have a couple of groups that figure it out quickly and a couple that never figure it out until we point it out. It is particularly effective when we teach these in our own schools, because we can truthfully say, “What would you say if we told you all of this was made up, and we wrote it ourselves?”

Do you feel that some students were (even more) confused about what were the true facts?

I haven’t had that experience, though I suppose it is definitely something you want to be cautious of, and it is the reason we explicitly teach students how information gets into books and onto Internet web sites. And even in the publishing world, with multiple layers of fact-checking, often errors make it into the final product. How much more, then, do we need to be cautious of the instant-publishing online world? After teaching these lessons, I insist that students find at least two sources, including at least one print source, to verify every fact they find.

What tips would you give someone who wants to use the lesson plans? What are some things to look out for?Highlights? Pitfalls?

I would strongly recommend using the full series of lessons and doing the follow up activities. While some of these can work well in isolation, it is the sequence that builds the understanding. Users also need to be aware that in some cases the content in the lessons is fairly specific to our own situation, particularly with reference to the subscription databases that are available to us. It is important that teachers using these lessons review them carefully and adapt the details to match what is available in your district.

I would also caution teachers to consider these principles themselves when doing any research of their own on the Internet. I have actually witnessed teachers who were present during our lessons with their classes and participated in the activities with us go later to search for something online and accept what they read at face value without checking the source or verifying the facts later. It’s important that we model these things for our students on a daily basis–show them that you apply the same principles to your own work as you expect them to do in theirs.

How could a teacher or media specialist customize your idea of creating a source of “false” information to another subject (not explorers) they are researching?

I have actually gotten requests along those lines to add more information on other topics and in other languages. While I haven’t had the time or energy to even consider pursuing such a project, with new Web 2.0 tools like wikis, a teacher could create a page of “false” information about a topic they are going to teach and have their students compare with a reliable Internet source.

What do you think of the idea to have students involved in such a project not only in uncovering “false” facts but actually correcting them online?

This is the entire purpose behind activity #5 in our lessons, “How Could The Be So Wrong?” I think it is crucial for students to learn that they not only have the obligation to think critically about what they read on the Internet, they have the power to do something about it. When they write to the webmaster in that final lesson, I read and respond to every comment. Now, granted, I’m not about to “correct” the errors that are on the actual pages–that would defeat the purpose of the site–but I do encourage the students to continue to pursue accuracy in their own research.

I believe it would be a very powerful experience for students of any age to follow up this unit with a visit to Wikipedia where you can have them search for–and correct–errors about a topic you may be studying in class. While it’s hard to predict when they might find such errors, and you certainly need to be cautious about what topics you explore in this way, it’s a perfect example of how the users of the Internet need to take responsibility for using it wisely and contribute to it effectively.

The more I “explore” the All About Explorers website, the more I am impressed with a well thought through concept.

  • As a webmaster, I can appreciate all the time and effort in designing, linking and updating the pages. The pages look well designed and “official” (not a home-made look). This supports the effort of separating the notion that content accuracy is coupled with professional looking packaging.
  • As a technology integrationist, I appreciate the fact that students are being guided and taught at school in using the internet to research curriculum related units instead of just being told “Google it” as a homework assignment. Technology is not the “enemy” that we need to protect our students from.  We need to teach/use technology as a tool COMBINED with the necessary skills to allow our students to use these tools in a  critical, efficient, effective, safe and ethical way.
  • As an educational media specialist, I am thrilled to see students being introduced to research skills that go beyond the book checked out in the library. Information found online or in any electronic form should NOT be discarded, prohibited, seen as less valuable or automatically inaccurate per se, but as an integral part of the research process.
  • As an elementary school teacher, I am thankful for age appropriate content and links, that allow my students to learn skills that are absolutely necessary for their future in the information age.

Watch this interesting video about The 21st Cenury Librarian from the New York Times that also mentions All About Explorers.

Web Searching Strategies for Elementary School Students

Information is ALL around us. Actually there is SO much information, that most people are overwhelmed with locating, saving, organizing and then later on retrieving it.

info_icon

Searching and research skills are becoming more and more important. Even first graders at our school are being asked to research in order to produce some sort of report.

Most reports will need to be written out on the traditional piece of paper. Occasionally, the assignment becomes creative and asks students to make a poster, a model, or a diorama. Some teachers are now venturing into integrating new media and allowing students to create different kinds of “reports’ that demonstrate their knowledge (or recount) of the information they have found. Ex. PowerPoint slideshow, PhotoStory movie, podcast audio

studying

Until recently classes were sent to the library to check out pre-selected books that would have some information about their topic.

Allowing students to search for their information on  the web makes teachers often uncomfortable.

  • They can’t control the content, students encounter
  • Overwhelming number of search results
  • Inappropriate sites
  • Inaccurate information
  • Citation

All the above mentioned reasons are valid points, but can’t be used as a reason to “stick to the book” when allowing younger students to research.

We do have to prepare them for research in media that is current for our times and one they most likely will use as as their primary source for gathering information as they grow.

Are books still your PRIMARY source when YOU gather information?

In our elementary school we are using the following search tools :

The customized Google Search engine is designed specifically for our students. The search is narrowed down to give results only from specific domains, handpicked by our teachers.

As part of a plan to continue to introduce and reinforce information literacy among our students, here are several resources for teachers and students to improve their searching skills on the web.

  • Keywords that are effective “as is”
  • Intermediate words that represent important ideas but probably are not effective “as is”
  • Words that have little effect on the outcome
  • Stop words that are ignored by a search engine

It is important to point out and practice the distinction of these words with your students. Check out the following Keyword Challenge site. It is a great sample of how to show examples and practice with our students.

  • CommonCraft – Web Search Strategies in Plain English



  • Patrick Woessner’ Effective Search Strategies from Technology in the Middle is geared towards 7th graders, but definitely adaptable to elementary school students.

google-search-tips

What are some search strategies that you are using to prepare elementary students in becoming efficient and productive web searchers?

Information Lesson: Kids in the White House

January 22, 2009 Elementary School, Information, SmartBoard Comments Off

Excitement was in the room… you could feel the learning happening.

Just wanted to share with you a great lesson that just seemed to happened. Don’t you love these moments?

Scenario: First grade class was coming to TechConnect. All they teacher knew was that she wanted to do something related to “post inauguration”.

My colleague Paige McGee and I spend time to search age appropriate links and posting them on our TechConnect blog.

The students arrived and their teacher gave them a brief introduction about what we were going to learn and talk about. She made the connection with what they had seen the day before at the presidential inauguration which we had streamed in for the entire school.

They were to go to their individual computers and explore the links we had provided and find one fun fact about the kids, pets, or the White House.

Our school is a very affluent school, which means that EVERY student has access to a computer at home. The difference in ability to manipulate a computer is very pronounced. It is obvious which students are allowed and encouraged to use a family computer at home and who does not. We are still dealing with fine motor skill development too.

So, it took time for the first graders to open up the browser, which takes them directly to our school homepage, find the link to TechConnect and start reading.

Children living in the White House

Have you ever imagined what it would be like to live in the White House with your mom or dad being the President?

For a few children this dream was and is  a reality.


Image by mbgrigby

Check out the following links:

Tidbits of First Kids (from Lesson Plan at Academy Link.com)

Abraham Lincoln’s youngest son, Tad, loved to play
in the White House. He once wore a soldier’s uniform and bombarded
the Cabinet Room door with a toy cannon.

Another president, James Garfield, lived in the White House with his family. His sons liked to have pillow fights in the East Room. They raced on the polished floors of the White House on large-wheeled tricycles.

The lively family of Theodore Roosevelt turned the White House into a play house. The younger ones roller-skated through hallways. Quentin, Theodore’s youngest son, loved animals. Once he borrowed a selection of snakes from a pet store. He burst in on an important meeting and dropped the snakes on his father’s desk, quickly ending the meeting. When another of Theodore’s sons got the measles, Quentin decided a visit from the family pony would cheer him up. He
snuck the pony onto an elevator and took it to his brother’s bedroom.

President John F. Kennedy’s son was just two months old when the family moved into the White House. Little “John-John” as he was called, liked to crawl around his father’s feet and hide behind a panel in the president’s desk. “John-John” turned the president’s desk into his own special fort.

Amy Carter was ten when her dad, Jimmy Carter, became president. Amy had a homework assignment that she didn’t quite understand. She asked for help from her mother who also didn’t know the answer. Her mother called some of the president’s helpers to answer the question.
They sent a delivery truck to the White House full of computer printouts. They thought the question came from the president and worked all weekend trying to find out the answer to Amy’s homework question

I wonder what Malia and Sasha will be up to during their time in the White House. What do you think?

We noticed that many of the children were really not reading, but rather looking at pictures and then clicking around. We reminded them that they needed to find a fun fact and then would come up to the SmartBoard to share that fact.

Once the first few students figured it out and we added the fact on the SmartBoard and inserted a clipart form the gallery, it seemed to snowball. Many literally ran back to their computer to “read” about another fact. They returned to the board with a part of that information. We wanted to have more detailed information, so they scurried back to find it. So Chelsea Clinton lived in the Whote House. How old was she when she moved in?

You could feel the excitement, you could feel the learning, you could feel the sense of accomplishment when they looked at the SmartBoard with ALL the fun facts they collaboratively accumulated.

kids-in-white-house

We felt that it was a great lesson for this age group to :

  • practice reading for information
  • practice reading hyperlinked text
  • use the Internet to gather facts
  • share with others

We took a screenshot of the SmartBoard slide and the teacher inserted it into her classroom blog. I wonder what extended learning will occur at home and in the classroom, when students revisit the image and recall the facts they have gathered.

Related Posts with Thumbnails

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typwriter-hyperinked-writing

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