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1
Climate Justice Literacy: Stories-We-Live-By, Ecolinguistics, and Classroom Practice
In: Teaching and Learning Faculty Publications (2020)
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2
Fostering Preservice and In-Service ELA Teachers’ Digital Practices for Addressing Climate Change
In: Teaching and Learning Faculty Publications (2020)
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3
What Is English Education for? Rethinking Our Work through Climate Change and the Environment
In: Teaching and Learning Faculty Publications (2019)
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4
Best Practices in Teaching Digital Literacies
In: Teacher Education Faculty Books and Monographs (2018)
Abstract: Chapter 7 Digital Literacies and Climate Change: Exploring Reliability and Truth(s) with Pre-service Teachers, by James S. Damico, Alexandra Panos (UNO Faculty), Michelle Myers Structured Abstract Purpose – To consider the ways two pre-service teachers evaluated digital information sources about climate change in order to highlight the challenges and possibilities of an instructional approach aimed at cultivating digital literacies about climate change among pre-service teachers. Design – The qualitative research design focuses on two pre-service teachers’ written reflections and participation during class discussions across two sessions in a content literacy course. The theoretical framework that guided the analysis was civic media literacy. Findings – Findings of this study highlight conceptions of reliability that two participants held (reliability as relative or as evidentiary support) as they worked with web sources about climate change. These conceptions reflected a denialist orientation to climate change science. Practical Implications – This study contributes to the literature that considers the ways pre-service teachers work with websites about socioscientific topics. It highlights how an instructional model can help promote digital literacy practices that center on evaluating the reliability of websites about climate change. It also includes a companion framework called fake experts, logical fallacies, impossible expectations, cherry picking, and conspiracy theories (FLICC) that can be used to guide students to better understand techniques and practices of science denial. ; https://digitalcommons.unomaha.edu/tedfacbooks/1001/thumbnail.jpg
Keyword: civic education; Climate change; climate denial; critical literacy; digital literacies; Education; FLICC; media literacy; online reading
URL: https://digitalcommons.unomaha.edu/tedfacbooks/2
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5
“I’m Not in the Truth Business”: The Politics of climate Change with Pre-Service Teachers
In: Teaching and Learning Faculty Publications (2018)
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6
What Changes Communities? Spatial Implications for Teachers in the Rural Rust Belt
In: Teaching and Learning Faculty Publications (2017)
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7
Designing Inquiries That Matter: Targeting Significance, Diversity, and Fit
In: Teaching and Learning Faculty Publications (2016)
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