Adolescents' evaluation of online scientific information in daily life contexts: when sourcing matters

Sourcing is the ability to evaluate information by analysing source parameters such as author's expertise on a given topic. Past research, mostly based on school-related materials and tasks, shows that adolescents do not pay attention to source parameters when evaluating online scientific infor...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of science education. Part B. Communication and public engagement 2023-10, Vol.13 (4), p.311-327
Hauptverfasser: Macedo-Rouet, M., Trópia, G., Castilhos, W., Massarani, L., Brasil, V., Almeida, C.
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container_issue 4
container_start_page 311
container_title International journal of science education. Part B. Communication and public engagement
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creator Macedo-Rouet, M.
Trópia, G.
Castilhos, W.
Massarani, L.
Brasil, V.
Almeida, C.
description Sourcing is the ability to evaluate information by analysing source parameters such as author's expertise on a given topic. Past research, mostly based on school-related materials and tasks, shows that adolescents do not pay attention to source parameters when evaluating online scientific information. However, recent research has suggested that such a 'lack of sourcing' may depend on the purpose for which information seeking takes place. The present study sought (a) to elicit the contexts in which adolescents seek information in their daily lives (included, but not limited to school-related assignments) and (b) to test the assumption that their attention to information sources depends on the purpose of their search. Focus groups were conducted with small groups of teenagers from contrasted socioeconomic backgrounds in two metropolitan areas (Rio de Janeiro and Paris). Five main contexts were identified, ranging from school assignments to monitoring topics of personal interest. Consistent with our assumption, references to sources were more frequent in personal compared with school information seeking contexts. The results suggest that researchers and science educators who wish to develop sourcing strategies among adolescents should use a variety of tasks, building on students' experiences of sourcing in daily life.
doi_str_mv 10.1080/21548455.2023.2175625
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source Taylor & Francis:Master (3349 titles)
subjects Adolescents
Assignments
Credibility
Education
Evaluative Thinking
Expertise
Foreign Countries
Humanities and Social Sciences
Independent Study
Information Seeking
Information Sources
Internet
online scientific information
Problem Solving
Science Interests
Scientific and Technical Information
Secondary School Students
Sourcing
title Adolescents' evaluation of online scientific information in daily life contexts: when sourcing matters
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