Making Curriculum Pop

This is from the Nov 2011 Wired Magazine. While I was aware of some of this research I love home Thompson put it all together here.  Also, I like the allusion to the famous 80's book Why Johnny Can't Read.

I can't tell you how many times I assigned simple "searches" early in my teaching carreer (late 90s) only to realize how much additional scaffolding was required to make the learning experience worthwhile.

Here are my favorite passages from Clive Thompson's Why Johnny Can't Search (this was the title in the print edition).

We’re often told that young people tend to be the most tech-savvy among us. But just how savvy are they? A group of researchers led by College of Charleston business professor Bing Pan tried to find out. Specifically, Pan wanted to know how skillful young folks are at online search. His team gathered a group of college students and asked them to look up the answers to a handful of questions. Perhaps not surprisingly, the students generally relied on the web pages at the top of Google’s results list.


But Pan pulled a trick: He changed the order of the results for some students. More often than not, those kids went for the bait and also used the (falsely) top-ranked pages. Pan grimly concluded that students aren’t assessing information sources on their own merit—they’re putting too much trust in the machine.


Mind you, mastering “crap detection 101,” as digital guru Howard Rheingold dubs it, isn’t easy. One prerequisite is that you already know a lot about the world. For instance, Harris found that students had difficulty distinguishing a left-wing parody of the World Trade Organization’s website from the real WTO site. Why? Because you need to understand why someone would want to parody it in the first place—knowledge the average eighth grader does not yet possess.


You can read and share the full article HERE.

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