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Edrith's avatar

In Year 6, we were set an exercise in French which involved writing the names of various animals on the continents in the approximate places in which they were found. A friend of mine, as a prank, put 'Le panda' in North America as well as China and, when challenged by the teacher, spoke convincingly of the 'North American pandas' he claimed to have recently learned about from a nature documentary. The end result was the teacher instructing the whole class to add 'Le panda' to North America.

I am dubious about our ability to spot misinformation in primary schools.

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MITCHELL WEISBURGH's avatar

I’ve thought about this a lot. I think it’s a lot less about techniques for fact checking or critical thinking, although those are helpful and necessary. Truth seeking begins with curiosity. What we don’t teach is how to recognize when we are in a certainty mindset, how to let that go, and then tap into our curiosity and abilities to explore, analyze, and synthesize. And of course, recognize when others are so certain they’ve also lost their abilities to reason, take in new information, and wonder.

Only then do the tools become useful. I’ve seen really good results with that approach.

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