Y12W25WR Evaluating information, seriously
Apply lateral reading to a current controversial claim circulating online, and document your process from encounter to informed assessment.
1Retrieval check
Q1.What did Sam Wineburg’s research find about traditional critical-thinking training?
- AIt always transfers well to online contexts
- BUniversity students trained in traditional critical-thinking still perform poorly at evaluating online sources without specific instruction
- CIt is unnecessary for digital natives
- DIt works best with printed sources
Q2.What is ‘lateral reading’ and why does it outperform ‘vertical reading’?
- AReading sideways on a screen to avoid eye strain
- BChecking other sources about a source (lateral) before engaging with its content, rather than reading deeper into the original page (vertical)
- CReading multiple pages at once
- DUsing screen-readers
Show answer key
Q1 → B. University students trained in traditional critical-thinking still perform poorly at evaluating online sources without specific instruction.Online source evaluation is a distinct skill that requires specific training.
Q2 → B. Checking other sources about a source (lateral) before engaging with its content, rather than reading deeper into the original page (vertical).Staying on the original page lets the source frame its own credibility; leaving it is the move that works.
2Prompt deconstruction
- Stimulus
- Wineburg’s research; lateral-reading technique.
- Scope
- One current controversial claim; walk through the actual process.
- Case
- Document every step — original source, its reputation, what other sources say, what the primary evidence actually shows.
- Thinking
- Not a ‘true/false’ verdict — a characterisation of evidentiary status.
- Output
- Process + assessment + transferable habits for the next claim.
3Position nudge
Where on the range does your proposal sit?
Pole AQuick lateral check (3 sources)
Pole BDeep lateral investigation (primary sources)
Commit to a specific point; defend it in your planner.
4Planner — design the thing, then the trade-offs
5Sentence stems
- My proposal is ___.
- I am grounding this in [researcher]’s finding that ___.
- The main trade-off is ___: this design gains ___ but loses ___.
- The most predictable objection is ___, and my response is ___.
- I would know it was working after [time] if ___.
- What I am most likely to abandon is ___, so I will build in ___ to prevent that.
6Exemplar paragraph (not about this article)
(1) My proposal is to apply Wineburg’s lateral-reading protocol to a claim circulating in my feeds that ‘screen time under 2 causes lasting developmental delays.’ (2) I am grounding this in Wineburg’s finding that vertical reading on the source’s own page is a bad evaluation path. (3) The main trade-off is time: this design gains calibration but loses the speed of just-reading-and-reacting. The most predictable objection is that lateral reading demands too much for every claim, and my response is that the protocol is calibrated — for high-stakes claims you go deep, for low-stakes you do a thirty-second check. (4) I would know it was working after a month if my own sharing behaviour dropped on claims I had not cross-checked. (5) What I am most likely to abandon is the primary-evidence step — going to the actual studies, not summaries of them — so I will build in a rule that no claim gets shared without the DOI or equivalent original reference in my notes. (6) The characterisation of the screen-time claim: the underlying research shows small correlational associations that do not establish causation and that vary by content and co-viewing; ‘lasting developmental delays’ overstates what the evidence supports.
What this paragraph does, move by move
- Names the specific claim under examination.
- Grounds in Wineburg’s lateral-vs-vertical finding.
- Calibrates the protocol by stakes (responds to ‘too much for every claim’).
- Specifies a one-month behavioural success test.
- Builds a no-share-without-DOI rule as the anti-abandonment mechanism.
- Ends with a characterisation, not a true/false verdict.
- Choosing a selection results in a full page refresh.
- Opens in a new window.