If the videos embedded in the assignment do not work, you can use these YouTube links:
In the Beyond Google Library Assignment, you will learn new ways to think about information by responding to questions and viewing two short videos.
Share your Research Question
Find a Source
Learn about Lateral Reading - a strategy to evaluate information critically
Many thanks to the fabulous librarians at University of Washington Libraries & Stanford History Education Group for creating such great videos and information as well as sharing it freely. Deep gratitude for Jennifer Masunaga for for sharing her lesson plan and worksheet which we modified slightly. Thank you!
Eisen, Ana. "Research is a Process." Research 101, University of Washington Libraries, 2018, https://guides.lib.uw.edu/research/UWresearch101/.
Masunaga, Jennifer. "Evaluating Online Sources with Lateral Reading." CORA (Community of Online Research Assignments), 2021. https://www.projectcora.org/assignment/evaluating-online-sources-lateral-reading.
Stanford History Education Group. "Sort Fact from Fiction Online with Lateral Reading." COR (Civic Online Reasoning), YouTube, 2020, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SHNprb2hgzU.
"Lateral Reading" was developed in LibWizard by Tessa Withorn, Aric Haas, and Carolyn Caffrey at CSU Dominguez Hills University Library and licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License. The "Lateral Reading" video is part of Citizen Literacy, a project created by Robert Detmering, Amber Willenborg, and Terri Holtze at the University of Louisville Libraries with a CC BY NC SA license.
This series is based on the ACRL Framework for Information Literacy for Higher Education