[Technology 1704] Re: Technology Digest, Vol 34, Issue 15Bakin, Barry barry.bakin at lausd.netFri Aug 1 18:06:58 EDT 2008
Thanks for the reference to the Wesite webquest-I've already decided to try it out with my students. It's obvious that a lot of developmental work went into it as the phony sites have all the external characteristics of authenticity up to the testimonial letters from "satisfied customers." Barry Bakin Pacoima Skills Center Division of Adult and Career Education, Los Angeles Unified School District -----Original Message----- From: technology-bounces at nifl.gov [mailto:technology-bounces at nifl.gov] On Behalf Of Linda Perry Sent: Thursday, July 31, 2008 12:01 PM To: The Technology and Literacy Discussion List Subject: [Technology 1703] Re: Technology Digest, Vol 34, Issue 15 About critical reading .... Hoax websites (such as The Tree Octopus site) can be effective tools for teaching critical reading and thinking skills. A few years ago when I was coordinating the NIFL Technology Training Special Collection, we created a WebQuest called Websites ... Which Ones Should You Trust? I just checked and the WebQuest is still posted. It walks students through the process of asking a series of questions (Who is the author?, Is the information accurate?, Is there bias?, When was the website made?) to help them develop a set of criteria for judging the reliability of online resources. Each question also offers activities using legitimate and hoax websites. The link below will take you to the part of the site that is designed for students. Once there, you can click on the link For Teachers in the upper right corner to learn more about using this WebQuest with your students: http://www.altn.org/webquests/websites/index.html -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://www.nifl.gov/pipermail/technology/attachments/20080801/f4c1ef04/attachment.html
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