Activate Prior Knowledge (5 minutes)
Have students respond to the following prompt: Have you heard the term fake news? What do you think it means? Why might it be a problem? Discuss responses as a class. Then tell students they’re about to read two texts about fake news.
Preview Text Features (15 minutes)
Guide students to locate the article and the infographic. Then preview the text features by asking the following questions:
- Read the article’s title and subtitle (the text under the title). When you get a piece of information on your social media feed or from your friends, do you check to see if it’s true? How can you tell that something might not be true? Answers will vary.
- Look at the infographic. Read the title and subtitle. The subtitle uses the term disinformation. Look at the vocabulary box to read the meaning of this word. What is another word for disinformation? Another word for disinformation is lie. Why do you think it’s important to stop the spread of lies online? Answers will vary.
Preview Vocabulary (10 minutes)
- Point out the vocabulary box. Read the words (disinformation, source, confirms, alleged, outright) aloud and discuss their definitions.
- Play the Vocabulary Slideshow.
Make a Plan for Reading
Before students start to read, walk them through a reading plan:
- Set a purpose for reading by telling students that the article and the infographic provide information about how lies spread and what can be done to stop them from spreading.
- Tell students that after they read, they’ll complete a synthesizing activity by combining information from the texts.