Site icon Flipped Tech Coaching

Evaluating the Authenticity of Websites

Attention Grabber

It is so important that students learn to think critically about information found online. I decided to grab students’ attention by introducing the following (fake) websites and requesting student feedback.

The results were far from shocking.

Grade 3: Third graders decided I should NOT send my dog to Dog Island as it did not seem like a nice place. However, they did not question the website’s authenticity.

Grade 4: Fourth graders voted to save the Northwest Tree Octopus.  Only a couple of students seemed confused while learning that this octopus lived in a tree. But, they still did not question the authenticity of the website. Only one student raised their hand to share that they thought “something is wrong with the website.”

Grade 5: Roughly a quarter of the fifth graders picked up on the false information. I politely asked those students to hold their thoughts until after I asked the class to vote if we should use this website as a resource. The majority of the students still voted YES!

Action Taken

Predictably, after I revealed the objective of this lesson the students laughed and pretended like they knew the websites were “fake” the entire time. We then talked about how we can evaluate websites for authenticity and brainstormed many different ideas.

Students then used this Google Sheets checklist to go back and evaluate the authenticity of the website using the 5 W’s:

Evaluating Website Google Sheet Template: Click USE TEMPLATE to modify.

Here is a template you may use with your students.

Not only was this lesson extremely important; but it was also extremely fun! Many students laughed as they exited the classroom stating, “You got us again, Mrs. Boucher! Not next year!” Hopefully, they are correct.

Lesson Slideshow

An amazing reader sent me a fabulous Google Slides lesson they created using this blog post. Check it out here! (Somehow, I cannot find the name of the teacher that created and sent me this Slideshow, so if it was you, please send me an email so I can give you credit!)

How do you teach students to evaluate website authenticity? Have any great resources you’d like to share?

Exit mobile version