Lesson: TO TRUST or NOT TO TRUST ? KNOW HOW TO TRUST... By Prof Pushpa Nagini Sripada

Introduction

What do you think the lesson is about? 

Task

Task 1: Individual work :

1. Am I a good researcher?

Read the self-survey and mark "yes" or "no"-

  • I always start the work by collecting background information about the topic first by going to the University library.
  • When I look up the internet for materials, I choose  the  articles that I can read and understand well.
  • When I come across a contradictory topic, I try  to find opinions on both sides of the question.
  • I usually  read the first and the last paragraph. If I don’t  understand the main ideas of the article, I don't use the article  

(Adapted from Krauss( 2015) https://webdisk.lclark.edu/krauss/cwis/usia/syllabus2b.html)

If you have marked "yes" to all answers, you are an excellent  researcher

 Pair Work:

2. Share your responses with your partner

Process

3. Vocabulary:

Table 2:Match the words with their meaning

Objectivity

the quality or state of being correct or precise

Advocacy

popularity, circulation

Authority      

The percentage of people access something in the past and in present times.

Accuracy

Mastery, command, expertise

Currency

not influenced by personal feelings, interpretations, or prejudice; based on facts; unbiased

Coverage

support and  argument for one point of view , not covering both sides

4. Check your answers by using the online dictionary-Use the link below

http://www.thefreedictionary.com/accuracy

5. Look at the  domain suffixes and their meaning-

Which domain suffixes will you trust?

.com = commercial
.edu = educational
.org = non-commercial organization
.ml = military
.gov = government
~name = personal page 

6.Team  Discussion:

ü  Discuss in groups how you can search for information on the web

ü  Share if you had any difficulties in using the web for information

ü  Share with how you decide on the good links for getting  information

ü  Discuss every point and make a note of group ideas

 

6. Paired reading:Form three pairs in a group and read the below articles.    

1.  

 https://webdisk.lclark.edu/krauss/cwis/usia/trustworthy.html

The above site discusses  How Trustworthy Are Internet Sources? The article is very useful to students interested in knowing the criteria and checklists for testing the validity of a internet resource.

 2.  

 http://www.library.georgetown.edu/tutorials/research-guides/evaluating-internet-content

The above site discusses  How Trustworthy Are Internet Sources? The article is very useful to students interested in knowing the criteria and checklists for testing the validity of a internet resource. 

 3.  http://web.archive.org/web/19991128093950/http://www.vuw.ac.nz/~agsmith/evaln/index.htm#Breadth

The above link provides information on Evaluation of the sites with a tool to check too 

 

Take the following roles to your group

Facilitator

 

Relates the task, verifies roles, and facilitates colleagues participation in doing the tasks

Manager

Keeps track of time and materials

Researcher

 

Checks in with the teacher and / or checks resources on team’s questions

Recorder

Records team’s responses

Editor

 

Checks team’s work for accuracy( use of phrases in writing and presenting

Presenter

Makes an oral presentation of the team’s ideas to the whole group

Pairs creator

Decides on paring group memebers for paired reading- forms twosomes (or three somes if extra member in an odd numbered group)

Evaluator

 

Evaluates group performance by using the  rubric and involves others in the group  evaluating

7. Team discussion: Do you agree with the following statement?

 Unlike similar information found in newspapers or television broadcasts, information available on the Internet is not regulated for quality or accuracy; therefore, it is particularly important for the individual Internet user to evaluate the resource or information” (http://www.library.georgetown.edu.com)

 

Evaluation

8. Evaluate your work by using the following rubrics

Table 3:Work on Task:

Steps

 

Lead

Notes

Completed

1.Pick up material

 

 

 

2.Read task instructions

 

 

 

3. Confirm understanding

 

 

 

4. Assign roles/ delegate work

 

 

 

5. Set a time limit for group

 

 

 

6. Work on task

 

 

 

7. Check group’s work

 

 

 

8. Turn in completed worksheet

 

 

 

 

Table 4: Team Discussion:

#

Team member

Role

  1.  

 

 

  1.  

 

 

  1.  

 

 

  1.  

 

 

  1.  

 

 

  1.  

 

 

Table 4: Team Ideas

Idea

Contributor

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Conclusions : What conclusions your group reach?

We all think …. We agree that…. We agree to disagree that… some of us feel… while others expressed …

 

 

 

 

Adapted from : Light Hearted Learning 2015

Table 6: Rubrics for  Evaluation

Team work assessment

Exceeds expectations

Meets expectation

Does not meet expectation

Roles and responsibilities

All team members carried out roles without reminder

Most team members carried out roles with few  reminders

Most  team members not carry out their roles or needed to be reminded several times

 

Participation

Most team members offered more than one idea and encouraged participation

All team members offered at least  one idea

Most team members did not  offer any ideas

Accuracy

The group report / presentation was

Complete, accurate

and eloquent

use of phrases at least one or two

Complete and grammatically  accurate

 

incomplete, or inaccurate or both

 

Conclusion

Search information on " Global warming"

do the follwoing task by looking at the links:

( source : Krauss 2015' Internet in ESL Classrooms"

Objectivity/Advocacy:

Some articles are written to report information objectively (without the author’s opinion). Other articles are written to “advocate” the author’s point of view, either for or against an issue.  It is okay to use advocacy articles, but you also need to find an equal number of articles from the other side’s point of view. 

  1. ___Is it clear to you that this article is either objective reporting or an advocacy article? 

Which is it? (check one) ___objective         ___advocacy 

2.  ___Is more than one viewpoint expressed?

3. ___Can you identify the name of the organization that put up this Web site?

          Which organization is sponsoring it? 

Authority:

1. ___Do you know who wrote the information on this page?  

2. ___Is there a link to contact the author? 

3. ___ Is there information to show that the author is knowledgeable or an expert? 

Check the URL (Web address).  A tilde (~) means the page is a personal one, not part of an organization’s official Web site.  Try putting the author’s name into Google.  See what else s/he has written.  You can also put the URL into Google.  This will show you which sites link to the page you found.

 

Accuracy:

1. ___ Can you tell where the author got his/her information?  Are there links to the sources? 

2. ___ Is the information typed correctly, with correct grammar and spelling?

 

Currency:

It is important to have up-to-date information.  Some Web sites have old information that is still useful, but if the actual Web site is not updated, you may doubt the information that is presented.

 1. ___Can you find the date that this article was originally written?

          Date:

 

2. ___Can you find the date that this article was put on the Web?

          Date:

 

3. ___Can you find the date that this article was revised?

 

4. ___Click on three links in the text (if there are links in the text).  Are all the links working?

 

Coverage:

Some Web sites are collections of links to other Web sites.  They are useful, but they not considered a “source” of information for your paper. 

 

1. ___Does this Web site contain original information?

 

2. ___Does this article contain information that will help you with your paper? 

 

 

Credits

Peer review

Acknowledgements:

The resources are povided by Krauss ( 2015) " Internet in ESLClassrooms

https://webdisk.lclark.edu/krauss/cwis/usia/home.html ( copy right materials)

Team Roles, Team Discussion, Rubrics  : Light Hearted Learning 2015 

shared during TESOL workshop April 2015 at Chandigarh

adapted to suit the level of learners

Teacher Page

Level:  intermediate and above

Time 50 minutes

Material needed:

Internet connectivity

handouts for the teams to make a note of team work as mentioned in Evaluation

Dvide the class into groups of 6 or 8

Ensure team role assginemnt, pair reading, and team discussion

Explain the task 

1. In groups students think/ pair / share work and learn how to truat websites