Title: Remember the pregnant man
1Remember the pregnant man!
- Guiding Students to Think about the Reliability
of Sources
2We live in times when information is easily
available, but . . .
- Can we trust the information we find?
- Our students often believe we can!
- The National Council of Teachers of English
polled 900 teachers of language arts about what
21st-century students most need to learn. - Respondents said that the most important
21st-century literacy skill is the ability to
seek information and make critical judgments
about the veracity of sources (Writing between
the Linesand Everywhere Else, 1).
3Research Skills Finding Information AND
Evaluating It
- Finding information is important, of course, but
it is something weve always taught. - The 21st-century difference is that we no longer
face any scarcity of information on most
subjects. - The 21st-century problem (at least at this point
in the century) is that much of the available
information is biased, outdated, inaccurate, or
aimed at a different audience.
4Its a 21st-century problem, but is it really new?
- The existence of search engines and the World
Wide Web makes us more aware of the problem, but
we have always had to evaluate the sources we use
in research. - Books and journals can be biased or outdated or
simply not authoritative. - The clear need to evaluate online materials may
actually make it easier for undergraduates to
understand that we have to be careful with all
sources.
5- This presentation describes a sequence of
exercises Ive been using for the past few years
to help students learn to think about the online
sources they decide to use. - Students seem to enjoy the work, and although I
havent done any formal surveys, they also seem
to remember at least some of the information. - In addition, I enjoy interacting with students
when they are working on these labs. When an
English teacher can enjoy teaching the research
paper, its an occasion worth noting!
6Background
- At Winston-Salem State University, students take
a two-semester freshman composition course. - ENG 1301 is a standard first-semester composition
course. ENG 1302 is literature-based. Both
courses require students to write research
papers. - All sections have Blackboard available and
normally all sections meet in a computer
classroom once a week.
7- On lab days, my students are instructed to open
Blackboard and click on the Labs button. Early
in the research paper unit, the lab exercise
deals with evaluating sources.
8- The key sites for this exercise are the two
hospital links. - One is local and real,
- but the other is a hoax site that students are
not likely to have seen before.
9- The WFUBMC site belongs to a medical center in
our city. - The RYT Hospital site (http//www.rythospital.com/
2008/) looks very much like a real hospital site,
but it is actually an elaborate and somewhat
frighteningly believable art project (I think!)
10(No Transcript)
11The RYT site looks real, but as students explore
they find research projects like the one on
NanoDocs
- RYT Hospital patients can monitor their health
in real-time via nanotech robots, or NanoDocs,
which live and travel within their blood and
tissue. - Theres even an impressive animation of medical
nanites
12Then theres Genochoice
- Using our state-of-the-art technologies, you can
quite possibly ensure that your child's life may
be free of such diseases as cancer, Alzheimer's,
and heart disease -- as well as conditions like
obesity, aggression, and dyslexia.
13Clyven (the Mouse with Human Intelligence)
- By implanting human brain cells (grown from a
human embryo's stem cells) into a mouse
engineered to have Alzheimer's, Dr. Keyes
inadvertently made a remarkable and startling
discovery she not only cured the mouse's
Alzheimer's Disease, but the animal soon
developed the relative intelligence of a human
being. - Visitors are invited to chat with Clyven or
listen to an audio feed from his cage.
14Pop! The First Male Pregnancy
- The pregnant man is not described as being
transgender, though he is said to send his
congratulations to fellow pregnant dad Thomas
Beatie. - There are videos, an ultrasound, even a very
convincing image of a U.S. News and World Report
cover.
15Wait a minute . . .
- At some point, students realize the site is a
hoax. - I walk around looking over their shoulders,
waiting for them to tell me that it cant be
real. - Then we discuss how they knew something was
wrong. Whatever they have noticed usually hinges
on something they know (like how the uterus
works) that makes the research impossible.
16- By this time, students get it when I say that
if theyre going to believe anything they find
online, they might as well do research by
standing on a busy sidewalk and asking the people
who walk by what they think about the subject. - During the rest of the lab, students seem to pay
close attention to tutorials and lists of
criteria that will help them learn to judge a
sites reliability. The list of sites I use
appears on the next slide.
17 - ICYouSee T is for Thinking (http//www.ithaca.e
du/library/training/think.html) This is a helpful
tutorial with some funny links. Everyone should
go through this tutorial at some point during or
after the lab. - Evaluating Information Found on the Internet
(http//www.library.jhu.edu/researchhelp/general/e
valuating/index.html ) This isn't a tutorial, but
it's more elaborate and informative than a simple
list of criteria. The section on "Point of View
or Bias" is particularly good. - Evaluating Online Sources A Tutorial
(http//bcs.bedfordstmartins.com/techcomm/content/
cat_030/evaluatingsources/index.html ) You may
need to go to the Concise Guide to Writing home
page, sign in, and then go to this page--the link
is in the upper right quadrant of the page. - The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly
(http//lib.nmsu.edu/instruction/eval.html) This
site gives criteria and includes examples of
unreliable pages. - Checklist for Evaluating Web Sites
(http//www.wssu.edu/WSSU/About/Administration/Inf
ormation20Resources/C.G.20OKelly20Library/RGChe
cklist ) This is O'Kelly Library's guide to
evaluating web sources. It has good information,
and there are some very good links (like The
Good, The Bad, and The Ugly) at the bottom of the
page.
18A pregnant man is hard to forget . . .
- Even late in the next semester, students who have
looked through the RYT Hospital site are likely
to pay at least some attention to whether a site
is reliable. - If they seem to be impressed by something flashy
but not necessarily reliable, all I need to say
is Remember the pregnant man!
19Evaluating Reliable Sites
- Recognizing unreliable sites is important, but
its not all there is to judging sources. - During the second semester, students complete a
lab designed to help them think about how to
proceed when apparently reliable sources provide
conflicting information. - Most of the exercise deals with online sources,
but the principles apply to other sources as well.
20The first part of the lab gives students an
opportunity to review some of the materials used
in the previous course
21Next students look at sites that give some
conflicting information about Langston Hughes
background and early career
- They find that PBS Kids says Hughes grew up in a
wealthy, well-educated family in the Midwest and
traveled abroad. - Other sites say that Hughes came from a
distinguished family, but that he and the
grandmother who reared him were very poor. - Students decide which site they believe about
this and some other issues and then post
discussion board entries about which site they
believe and why.
22The final part of the exercise directs students
to two pages that feature the same picture.
- The PBS Kids site identifies it as Langston
Hughes as a student at Lincoln University, 1928 - The Kenneth Spencer Research Library of the
University of Kansas, on the other hand,
reproduces a book cover with the same picture and
says The photograph on the front was taken in
Tashkent, U.S.S.R., in 1933.
23Which Site to Believe?
- Students have been taught to respect PBS, and
they have also been taught to respect university
libraries. They cant go by reputation alone. - They are asked to think If you had to judge
between these conflicting statements, where and
when would you judge that this picture was
probably made? (Consider where the page you are
looking at is located, what purpose it seems to
be intended to serve, what kind of sources the
author of the page probably used, etc. This is
not an easy question, and it does not have an
obvious answer. For this part of the exercise,
feel free to look for more information on other
sites if you think of some good places to look.)
24Which Site to Believe?
- Most students work busily and make a decision,
again posting their reasons on a discussion
board. - At the following class meeting, I show a slide
show that looks at some of the ways one might go
about deciding whom to believe. - The next few slides have been copied from
Langston Hughes Online Judging the Quality of
Apparently Reliable Web Sources
25This picture appears at http//spencer.lib.ku.edu/
exhibits/langston/poetry.htm , a web page
maintained by the Kenneth Spencer Research
Library at the University of Kansas, with this
label This educational pamphlet, published in
1967, provides information about Hughes and his
work. The photograph on the front was taken in
Tashkent, U.S.S.R., in 1933.
26However, the same picture appears at
http//pbskids.org/bigapplehistory/arts/topic10.ht
ml with the caption Langston Hughes as a student
at Lincoln University, 1928.
Both of these sites should be reliable, since one
is a research library at a major university and
the other is an educational site maintained by
PBS, the Public Broadcasting Service, a
recognized source of educational programming.
How shall we decide whom to believe when reliable
sources disagree?
27Some possible criteria
- Is the rest of the page accurate?
- Do the dates fit with what is known of LHs life?
- Is that Hughes signature?
- How does the suggested date relate to LHs
apparent age in the picture? - How well does the suggested setting match the
visual image? - If we decide one is correct, can we explain the
error in the other? - Do other reliable sources provide any help?
28Is the rest of the page accurate?
- The Univ. of Kansas Library site has pictures of
the items in an exhibition about LH. Nothing in
the captions appears unlikely. - The PBS Kids site says Hughes . . . grew up in a
wealthy, well-educated family in the Midwest and
travelled abroad. But until he was 13 LH lived
with his grandmother, who was well-educated but
often had little money. In The Big Sea, his
autobiography, Hughes says We were poor. . . .
He did travel abroad, but he traveled as a
worker on a cargo ship. However, the family
Hughes came from was very distinguished and
well-educated, so possibly the PBS sites author
incorrectly assumed that being distinguished
automatically means being wealthy. Thus this
error can be explained.
29Is that Hughes signature?
We need to compare this signature to one reliably
attributed to LH.
The signatures are similar, so it appears that LH
himself probably wrote the caption. However, he
wrote it on a booklet published in 1967. so he
cannot have written it before that date, over 30
years after his visit to the USSR.
Am I/Are you always accurate about pictures made
even 10 years ago? How about 30?
30If we decide one source is correct, can we
explain the error in the other?
- The identification made by the KU library
probably rests on the annotation in LHs
handwriting. But we know that annotation must
have been made 30 years after the picture was
made. Furthermore, LH appears to have put a
different year in a note written on another copy
of the pamphlet that belongs to the University of
Delaware.
By 1936, Hughes was back in the U.S., so that
date cannot be right. However, it is clear that
he said at least twice that the picture was made
in Tashkent.
31The PBS Kids site says its picture came from
Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture,
so the Lincoln University identification may have
come from there. We do not know what sources the
scholars at PBS or the Schomburg used, but
possibly the picture was identified by someone
who simply knows the campus of Lincoln
University. At any rate, PBS and the Schomburg
Center are both known as very reliable sources,
and on this issue there is no obvious way to
explain an error made by either. At this
point, we need to turn to print sources.
32Consulting Print Sources
- In The Life of Langston Hughes Vol. I
1902-1941, I, Too, Sing America, Arnold Rampersad
reprints the photo between pp. 182 183.
Rampersad is a careful researcher and his
biography is regarded as authoritative, so it is
highly likely that his identification is correct.
The picture was probably made at Lincoln
University in 1928. However, if that is true,
Hughes himself apparently misidentified the
picture at least twice!
33- The first time I used this exercise, I was
inclined to think the Tashkent identification was
correct because of the PBS Kids site error about
Hughes familys poverty (and because I too
respect university libraries). - At the next class meeting, two proud young ladies
showed me the identification in Rampersads
biography. They had actually been interested
enough to go and look something up! It was one of
the high points of my career. - Of course, even Arnold Rampersad could be
mistaken. If anyone who views this presentation
can provide further information, Ill be
delighted to hear it.
34Works Cited and Web Sites Used in These Exercises
- Beck, Susan E. The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly,
or, Why Its a Good Idea to Evaluate Web Sources.
1997. New Mexico State University Library. 17
Mar. 2009 ml. - Henderson, John R. ICYouSee T Is for Thinking.
16 Jan. 2008. Ithaca College Library. 17 Mar.
2009 /training/think.html. - Hughes, Langston. The Big Sea. New York, Hill and
Wang, 1963. - Kirk, Elizabeth E. "Evaluating Information Found
on the Internet." The Sheridan Libraries. 1996.
Johns Hopkins University. 17 Mar. 2009
valuating /index.html. - "Langston Hughes." PBS Kids Go Big Apple
History. 2005. Thirteen/WNET New York,
Educational Broadcasting Corporation. 17 Mar.
2009 c10.html. - "Langston Hughes the Poet." Langston Hughes A
Voice for All People. Curated by Sheryl Williams.
Kansas Collection, Kenneth Spencer Research
Library, University of Kansas. 17 Mar. 2009
ry.htm.
For a clickable version of this list, go to
http//myweb.wssu.edu/wallr/tlt.htm .
35Works Cited and Web Sites Used in These Exercises
- "Library Guides - Checklist for Evaluating Web
Sites." 2005. C. G. O'Kelly Library,
Winston-Salem State University. 17 Mar. 2009
ormation20Resources/C.G.20OKelly20Library/RGChe
cklist. - Munger, Roger. Evaluating Online Sources A
Tutorial. Bedford / St. Martin's. 17 Mar. 2009
/techcomm/content/cat_030/evaluatingsources/index.
html. - Rampersad, Arnold. The Life of Langston Hughes
I, Too, Sing America. Vol. 1. New York Oxford
University Press, 1986. 2 vols. - RYT Hospital Dwayne Medical Center. 2008. 17
Mar. 2009 . - Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center. 9
Feb. 2008. Wake Forest University School of
Medicine and North Carolina Baptist Hospitals. 17
Mar. 2009 . - Wong, Virgil. "RYT Hospital-Dwayne Medical
Center." Virgil Wong. 2008. 17 Mar. 2009
/rythospital/index.shtml?name1RYTHospitaltype1
2Active. - "Writing between the Lines--and Everywhere Else
A Report from the National Council of Teachers of
English." NCTE National Council of Teachers of
English. Mar. 2009. National Council of Teachers
of English. 17 Mar. 2009 ary /NCTEFiles/Press/WritingbetweentheLinesFinal.p
df.