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Kids and credibility : an empirical examination of youth, digital media use, and information credibility

Title
Kids and credibility : an empirical examination of youth, digital media use, and information credibility / Andrew J. Flanagin and Miriam Metzger ; with Ethan Hartsell [and others].
ISBN
026226658X
9780262266581
9780262514750
0262514753
Published
Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, ©2010.
Physical Description
1 online resource (xviii, 135 pages) : illustrations.
Local Notes
Access is available to the Yale community.
Notes
OCLC-licensed vendor bibliographic record.
Access and use
Access restricted by licensing agreement.
Summary
Overview: How well do children navigate the ocean of information that is available online? The enormous variety of Web-based resources represents both opportunities and challenges for Internet-savvy kids, offering extraordinary potential for learning and social connection but little guidance on assessing the reliability of online information. This book reports on the first large-scale survey to examine children's online information-seeking strategies and their beliefs about the credibility of that information. This Web-based survey of 2,747 children, ages 11 to 18 (and their parents), confirms children's heavy reliance on the Internet. They are concerned about the credibility of online information, but 89 percent believe that "some" to "a lot" of it is believable; and, choosing among several options, they rate the Internet as the most believable information source for entertainment, commercial products, and schoolwork (more credible than books for papers or projects). Most have more faith information found on Wikipedia more than they say others should; and they consider an article on the Web site of Encyclopedia Britannica more believable than the identical article found on Wikipedia. Other findings show that children are appropriately skeptical of trusting strangers they meet online, but not skeptical enough about entertainment and health information found online. Older kids are more rigorous in their assessment of online information than younger ones; younger children are less analytical and more likely to be fooled.
Variant and related titles
MIT Press complete backfile monographs D2O.
Format
Books / Online
Language
English
Added to Catalog
February 07, 2022
Series
The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Reports on Digital Media and Learning
Citation

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