GSAN: Special issue: Fact-checking quiz

Get Smart About News

Your guide to helping young
people get smart about news.

 
Hi there,

Welcome to this special issue of Get Smart About News, brought to you by News Literacy Project misinformation expert and RumorGuard® writer Dan Evon.

As a newsletter reader, you’re likely familiar with Dan's work on our RumorGuard examples. Below you’ll find a fact-checking quiz he made that has three examples of misinformation on social media and asks quiz-takers to spot red flags. 🚩

We’ve noticed you’ve enjoyed past quizzes — like this AI quiz and this misinformation quiz — which you can now find in NLP’s Resource Library. Interested in more quizzes? Feel free to respond to this email with any news literacy quiz topics you’re interested in, and we will consider it!😊

Also, Get Smart About News is taking a break next week due to a staff retreat, but we will be back in your inbox on March 18.

— The newsletter team
 

Quiz yourself on fact-checking skills

While it is important for social media users to know the skills to verify the content in their feeds, they first need to learn how to identify which claims need fact-checking. When should we be skeptical of a viral post? When should we be confident that accurate information is being shared with us?

Try out the new fact-checking quiz below to see how good you are at spotting red flags that often accompany viral misinformation. Click on the questions or answers and an interactive version of this six-question quiz will open in a new browser tab.

Refer to the News Literacy Project’s “In brief: Misinformation” and “Detecting tricks of context” infographics to help answer these quiz questions. NLP’s “Is it legit? Five steps for vetting a news source” infographic may be helpful too.

 
 
 
 
 
 
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Thanks for reading!

Your weekly issue of Get Smart About News is created by Susan Minichiello (@susanmini.bsky.social), Dan Evon (@danieljevon), Peter Adams (@peteradams.bsky.social), Hannah Covington (@hannahcov.bsky.social) and Pamela Brunskill (@PamelaBrunskill). It is edited by Mary Kane (@mk6325.bsky.social) and Lourdes Venard (@lourdesvenard.bsky.social).

For more tips on talking with kids about news literacy, take a look back at previous Get Smart About News issues in the archives.

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