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Detecting fake news added to classroom instruction

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Pat Winters Lauro, a journalism professor at Kean University in Union, N.J., led a class discussion talking about fake news.

WILLIAMSVILLE, N.Y. >> Teachers from elementary school through college are telling students how to distinguish between factual and fictional news — and why they should care that there’s a difference.

As Facebook works with the Associated Press, FactCheck.org and other organizations to curb the spread of fake and misleading news on its influential network, teachers say classroom instruction can play a role in deflating the kind of “Pope endorses Trump ” headlines that muddied the waters during the 2016 presidential campaign.

“I think only education can solve this problem,” said Pat Winters Lauro, a professor at Kean University in New Jersey who began teaching a course on news literacy this semester.

Like others, Lauro has found discussions of fake news can lead to politically sensitive territory. Some critics believe fake stories targeting Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton helped Donald Trump overcome a large deficit in public opinion polls, and President Trump himself has attached the label to various media outlets and unfavorable reports and polls in the first weeks of his presidency.

“It hasn’t been a difficult topic to teach in terms of material because there’s so much going on out there,” Lauro said, “but it’s difficult in terms of politics because we have such a divided country and the students are divided, too, on their beliefs. I’m afraid sometimes that they think I’m being political when really I’m just talking about journalistic standards for facts and verification, and they look at it like ‘Oh, you’re anti-this or -that.’”

Judging what to trust was easier when the sources were clearer — magazines, newspapers or something else, said Kean senior Mike Roche, who is taking Lauro’s class. Now “it all comes through the same medium of your cellphone or your computer, so it’s very easy to blur the lines and not have a clear distinction of what’s real and what’s fake,” he said.

A California lawmaker last month introduced a bill to require the state to add lessons on how to distinguish between real and fake news to the grade 7-12 curriculum.

High school government and politics teacher Lesley Battaglia added fake news to the usual election-season lessons on primaries and presidential debates, discussing credible sites and sources and running stories through fact-checking sites like Snopes. There were also lessons about anonymous sources and satire. (They got a kick out of China’s dissemination of a 2012 satirical story from The Onion naming Kim Jong Un as the sexiest man alive.)

“I’m making you guys do the hard stuff that not everybody always does. They see it in a tweet and that’s enough for them,” Battaglia told her students at Williamsville South High School in suburban Buffalo.

“It’s kind of crazy,” 17-year-old student Hannah Mercer said, “to think about how much it’s affecting people and swaying their opinions.”

Stony Brook University’s Center for News Literacy pioneered the idea of educating future news consumers, and not just journalists, a decade ago with the rise of online news. About four in 10 Americans often get news online, a 2016 Pew Research Center report found. Stony Brook last month partnered with the University of Hong Kong to launch a free online course.

“To me, it’s the new civics course,” said Tom Boll, after wrapping up his own course on real and fake news at the Newhouse School at Syracuse University. With everyone now able to post and share, gone are the days of the network news and newspaper editors serving as the primary gatekeepers of information, Boll, an adjunct professor, said.

“The gates are wide open,” he said, “and it’s up to us to figure out what to believe.”

That’s not easy, said Raleigh, North Carolina-area teacher Bill Ferriter, who encourages students to first use common sense to question whether a story could be true, to look at web addresses and authors for hints, and to be skeptical of articles that seem aimed at riling them up.

He pointed to an authentic-looking site reporting that President Barack Obama signed an order in December banning the Pledge of Allegiance in schools. A “.co” at the end of an impostor news site web address should have been a red flag, he said.

“The biggest challenge that I have whenever I try to teach kids about questionable content on the web,” said Ferriter, who teaches sixth grade, “is convincing them that there is such a thing as questionable content on the web.”

Some of Battaglia’s students fear fake news will chip away at the trust of even credible news sources and give public figures license to dismiss as fake news anything unfavorable.

“When people start to distrust all news sources is when people in power are just allowed to do whatever they want, said Katie Peter, “and that’s very scary.”

3 responses to “Detecting fake news added to classroom instruction”

  1. allie says:

    Trump won in an illegitimate election fueled by foreign rigging, phony news, and lies. Shocking that we now all have to suffer the ignorance and lies of a very bad Trump.

  2. mitsuni says:

    So now the definitive left department of education will step in to ensure that our kids only read the “news” that is controlled by the liberals, ensuring they can regain and maintain control of the population. Very frightening. Fake news should also include networks like CNN, NBC, CBS that have been proven to manipulate photos, videos and dialogue to perpetuate the lefts ideology. Telling kids to listen to only sources “trusted” by the MSM is frightening. Hillary lost because she was a bad candidate that no one trusted, Trump albeit not an ideal candidate won because he talked to the people and told them what they wanted to hear, the left cannot and will not accept the defeat and continue to try to figure out how to regain control, this is just one more abuse by the left to keep the masses under their sway…wake up, do not be controlled read and research and educate yourself on issues, uses all sources to try and get as much information as you can with which to synthesize a position, do not trust MSM any more than any other source or allow teh left to decided what you should read and listen to, the conservative silent majority are not the “fascists”.

    • MillionMonkeys says:

      You were absent on the day they taught reading comprehension.

      Many times when a Trumpzi posts a link to an article supporting their cause, I look it up with an open mind. So far, I’ve always found inaccuracies, obvious exaggerations, and often just a titillating headline that lead the undereducated to an incorrect conclusion. I was a straight-A English major, and now teach reading comp along with math (because I’m good at logic).

      Anyone who believed or pretended to believe the birther theory and Trump’s eventual claim that he “put it to rest” needs to get a clue. You are wrong.

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