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Kick the School Year off with Claim Testers!

Bryan Dibble
Bryan Dibble 7 months ago

If you’re teaching climate change—or really any social studies class for that matter—I can’t stress enough how important it is to front-load the Claim Testers. Authority, Logic, Evidence, and Intuition aren’t just abstract ideas. They’re tools students need right away to help them sort through all the information they’re going to encounter, especially in a topic as complex and often controversial as climate change. I like Lesson 1.2 from the OER Climate Project, where students evaluate authority by ranking expertise and discussing perspectives. It gets them thinking critically right from the start.  You can even take the concept from 1.2 and extend it by using AI to give you more scenarios.  Also practice with additional short articles. Depending on your students, a video like Bob Bain’s “How Do We Decide What to Believe?” can also help introduce the concept, though it might feel a little dated now—something similar to that video can work just as well. Once those claim testers are introduced, they become a reference point you can return to constantly throughout the course. Students have to learn to pause and ask, “What claim tester applies here?” whenever they hear a big claim in class or in the news. I’m wondering—how any of you approach teaching the Claim Testers? What materials or strategies do you use to keep them front and center all year?  With climate studies, these are huge- but even if not in the realm of climate, how do you use Claim Testers?

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Parents
  • Angela Lee
    Angela Lee 7 months ago

    Thanks for starting off the conversation, Bryan Dibble 

    I think this is a great way to start, and it's tied in with medial literacy and critical thinking.  I don't know if I've used OER's framework in particular.  My students come in already familiar with CER (Claim Evidence Reasoning) from science classes, so I use that as a foundation, but I would love to layer that in with OER's framework this year. 

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  • Bryan Dibble
    Bryan Dibble 7 months ago in reply to Angela Lee

     Angela Lee  I dont get students coming to me with a solid well defined critical thinking set like what your science teachers deliver, but I do know that after I hammer my students with claim testers the other teachers tell me the kids use them!  No matter WHO gives kids these skills, they are critical!  How can we get claim testers or even CER delivered uniformly in upper elementary or middle school?  Don't you think critical thinking and questioning has to come before anything else?

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  • Bryan Dibble
    Bryan Dibble 7 months ago in reply to Angela Lee

     Angela Lee  I dont get students coming to me with a solid well defined critical thinking set like what your science teachers deliver, but I do know that after I hammer my students with claim testers the other teachers tell me the kids use them!  No matter WHO gives kids these skills, they are critical!  How can we get claim testers or even CER delivered uniformly in upper elementary or middle school?  Don't you think critical thinking and questioning has to come before anything else?

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Children
  • Andrea Wong
    Andrea Wong 6 months ago in reply to Bryan Dibble

    Bryan Dibble , I'm not sure which of my daughter's teacher started to instill the Claim Testers, but I can attest to the fact that she does use them! She's only going into 5th grade this year, but when she had a stubborn splinter that wouldn't come out we were researching different ways to help. She kept asking me what website I was looking at because she wanted legit medical advice only Slight smile

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  • Bryan Dibble
    Bryan Dibble 6 months ago in reply to Andrea Wong

    Smart kid!  Lots of fake remedies for splinters!

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