SparkNotes, PinkMonkey and CliffsNotesOh My Critiquing and Evaluating Online Study Guides

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SparkNotes, PinkMonkey and CliffsNotesOh My Critiquing and Evaluating Online Study Guides

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Critiquing and Evaluating Online Study Guides' By L. Nicosia. Who is this ... By critiquing online study guides, we broaden information literacy skills and ... –

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Title: SparkNotes, PinkMonkey and CliffsNotesOh My Critiquing and Evaluating Online Study Guides


1
SparkNotes, PinkMonkey and CliffsNotesOh My!
Critiquing and Evaluating Online Study Guides
By L. Nicosia
2
Who is this entry is referring to?
  • Narrator and main character of the novel.
    CliffsNotes.com

3
And this one?
  • The protagonist of the novel and the child of
    the town drunk. XXX is about 12 years
    old. PinkMonkey.com

4
In a recent poll of 25,000 high school students
in California, nearly half agreed with the
following statement
  • A person has to lie or cheat sometimes in order
    to succeed.

5
What would your students say about that statement?
6
What do YOU say about it?
7
Our students
  • Are technology savvy
  • Have never NOT known the internet
  • Are known as digital natives, the net
    generation and millenials
  • Know faculty as digital immigrants

8
Whether purchased legitimately or accessed for
free, todays shrewd and practical students will
use
  • SparkNotes
  • PinkMonkey
  • CliffsNotes
  • Barrons Notes
  • Masterplots

9
Use of these sources
  • Is inappropriate by our standards, if used to
    excess or as a substitute text.
  • Is efficient by their standards, in any
    context.

10
Heres what SparkNotes says
  • At SparkNotes, we never include disclaimers in
    our books because we trust that students who care
    enough about school to use SparkNotes value their
    education and therefore wont cheat themselves by
    plagiarizing our study guides.

11
What do YOU think about that statement?
12
This begs two questions
  • When does the use of published study guides
    become inappropriate?

13
And
  • With such ubiquitous sources and tempting
    references available 24/7, how can English
    teachers dispel the aura of the forbidden and
    declassify these texts?

14
How have you handled the SparkNotes Syndrome
while still encouraging
  • Internet literacy?
  • Scholarly curiosity?
  • Library research?

15
Anecdotally, just a few weeks ago
  • While my class was engaged in a group task to
    critique reliable and unreliable narrators, I
    noticed a student casually using his laptop to
    access SparkNotes. When I asked what he was
    doing, he said he wanted a little help.

16
My immediate instincts were to
  • Reprimand him for cheating and fail him for the
    assignment.
  • Make light of the situation by saying, Dont be
    a slacker. Do the work yourself!
  • Tell him to put the laptop away and work with his
    group members.
  • Praise him for his initiative.

17
How should I have handled it?
  • Is this a teachable moment?

18
What I did
  • I asked the class to stop what they were doing,
    and
  • Asked the young man to plug his laptop into the
    projection device and share what he learned so
    far.

19
What happened next was exciting
  • After several class discussions regarding the
    readerly responsibility to question the
    reliability of any first person narrator,
    students recognized that this website praises
    Nick Carraway as tolerant and open-minded.

20
  • Several students asked, Why dont they talk
    about his biases and his own secrets?

21
Lets look at what SparkNotes does say about Nick
  • Note While the print format is available for
    purchase online and at retail outlets such as
    Barnes and Noble, most students access the study
    guide onlinefor free!

22
Its YOUR turn
  • In what ways are these study guides different?
    Alike?
  • Try to find and note any contradictory statements
    and/or content.
  • Do any of the guides discuss issues of race?
    Gender? Socio-cultural differences?

23
I gave you two sample assignments
  • The study guide comparison task using data from
    SparkNotes, CliffsNotes, and PinkMonkey.
  • The class task based on the new No Fear
    Shakespeare entries from SparkNotes.

24
Selected sites your students use
  • www.pinkmonkey.com
  • www.sparknotes.com
  • www.novelguide.com
  • www.givemenotes.com
  • www.schoolpaper.com
  • www.cheathouse.com
  • www.lazystudents.com
  • www.geniuspapers.com
  • www.researchcentral.com
  • www.NetCheats.com

25
Final thoughts
  • Mastering our content areas is no longer
    sufficient. An additional burden to remain
    technologically current merely to keep up with
    our students has now been placed upon our
    shoulders.

26
By interrogating these study guides
  • Our students learn that we are familiar with some
    of their secrets
  • We encourage critical thinking and questioning
  • We expand classroom dialog rather than shutting
    the door on topics that touch our students lives

27
Finally
  • When we dispel the aura of the forbidden, our
    students can create new mental structures which
    organize and synthesize disparate data.
  • By critiquing online study guides, we broaden
    information literacy skills and empower students
    to be more discerning with the undigested
    information they encounter while surfing.

28
Thank you!
  • -L. Nicosia
  • Nicosiala_at_mail.montclair.edu
  • 5/06
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