There are a number of different definitions of information literacy and media literacy, and some combined definitions. Here is one definition:
"Information literacy is the ability to think critically and make balanced judgements about any information we find and use. It empowers us as citizens to developed informed views and to engage fully with society." (Secker, 2018)
Here are some questions to think about:
When evaluating the credibility of a media message, consider the following questions:
(Hobbs, 2011, p.16)
Be aware that your own thoughts and voice are unique and exercising them frequently by critically thinking and reading is an opportunity to flex your creativity, to challenge systemic bias, and to come up with novel ideas. In the long term, not practicing critical thinking, particularly on a larger human scale may have unintended consequences. You can read dozens of news articles every day about the advancements of algorithms and generative AI and the implications this will have on just about every aspect of human society.
Here are a few hopefully thought provoking examples about surprising ways humans are shaping information technologies, and technologies are shaping human systems:
Bloomberg - Generative AI takes stereotypes and bias from bad to worse
Forbes - The Hollywood Writers' Stirke: 3 reasons not to back down on AI
Butler, W. D., Sargent, A., & Smith, K. (2021). What are algorithms? In Introduction to college research. essay, LibreTexts.
Hobbs, R. (2011). Empowering Learners with Digital and Media Literacy. Knowledge Quest, 39(5), 12–17.
Secker, J. (2018). The revised CILIP definition of information literacy. Journal of Information Literacy, 12(1), pp. 156-158. doi: 10.11645/12.1.2454
Get ready to question everything you read, but with a mind open to learning from trusted sources!
Skepticism, but not cynicism (Reading on the dangers of information cynicism)
Ask questions of the text as you are reading as if you are having a conversation with it - if you are conducting research this will give you a natural segue into what research questions you want to investigate and support with outside evidence (sources)
The 5 W's and 1 H - "To help me understand details of what I read"
Evaluate and investigate the arguments, evidence given to support arguments, opinions, biases, etc. in the sources you encounter
SIFT Method - Seek verification from multiple, credible sources and trace original sources of evidence
Stanford History Education Group - How Fact Checkers Evaluate Information Online
Here is the presentation for Professor Karrer's UNIV 2001 class held on 11/1/2024. Misinformation and Disinformation Presentation If you have any questions or need to reach out to me, my email at the library is michelel@fdu.edu.