Comparing news articles lesson

July 13, 2023, 11:18 a.m.

Lesson plan: Find useful news about the issues you care about most

For a Google doc version of this lesson, click here.

Overview

This lesson is intended to start the conversation about useful and reliable news sources that help us take on the challenges we care about most. It challenges students to think about what information streams inform them now, where they can find news that speaks to their interests and passions, and how to evaluate news sources for credibility and dig deeper for more information. Essential question: How can you find reliable information streams about the issues you care most deeply about?

Objectives

Subjects

Media literacy, Social Studies, STEM, ELA

Grade Levels

Estimated time

Up to one 50-minute class period, plus extensions

Supplemental Links

Introduction

Students have the power today to start changing the world around them. Whether through civic action like getting involved with a community group or coming up with inventive solutions to the problems of the day, teenagers have incredible power to meet challenges head on and address needs in their communities — and the world.

But to change the world, students need good information about the problems confronting us all. Where should we go to find news that will help us know what action to take?

Materials

Warm-up activity

Watch the following video and then answer the questions:

  1. How would you answer the question prompt in this video? What was the last news story you read or watched? (You can even include just a headline you remember or something you saw on social media, including TikTok or YouTube).
  2. What answer from the students in this video most closely matches your own interests in the news?

Main activity

1. What do you care about?

In small groups, discuss what topics most interest you. Start with the question : If you could learn more about one topic that could help you make a difference, what topic would that be? You can use the following chart to help you brainstorm.

Common topics of interest for students: