
Questioning CRAAP
Author(s) -
M. Sara Lowe,
Katharine Macy,
Emily Murphy,
Justin Kani
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
the journal of scholarship of teaching and learning
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1527-9316
DOI - 10.14434/josotl.v21i3.30744
Subject(s) - credibility , session (web analytics) , mathematics education , psychology , library instruction , teaching method , wonder , pedagogy , information literacy , computer science , political science , social psychology , world wide web , law
Librarians and instructors see college students struggle with evaluating information and wonder how to best teach source evaluation in a one-time course integrated library research session to ensure understanding and improve student performance. This research compared multiple sections of first-year students over two semesters taught two evaluation methods: the CRAAP method, and the six journalistic question words. Results indicate that students taught to evaluate information using the six question words produced better end-of-semester papers. Results of the pre-, post-, and end-of-semester quizzes were less conclusive, but do highlight some of the challenges first-year students face when determining credibility. Results have the potential to inform instructional practice.