The Lawrence Hall of Science
The public science center of the University of California, Berkeley.
Open Wednesday-Sunday 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m. Animal Discovery Zone 11:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m.
We’ll bring our science programs to you.
Our offerings are built for you, whether you are an informal educator, a science center director, a classroom teacher, or a school and district leader.
Our services are designed to support you in using data to demonstrate the impact of your STEM learning experiences and make strategic programming decisions. We can partner with you to bring interactive, relevant, and accessible learning experiences to your audience.
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A fundamental part of science is using information as evidence to support explanations. We are all exposed to information (reliable and unreliable) every day, and this information shapes our decisions and worldview. The ability to evaluate the quality of sources of information is an important part of constructing and critiquing scientific explanations (as well as an important life skill). Students, and even many adults, can sometimes base their explanations on evidence from unreliable sources and can learn to think critically about the reliability of sources and to cite their own sources of information whenever they share ideas. In this activity, students sort different sources of science information from most to least reliable, discuss their rationale with their peers, and come to a deeper understanding of what makes a source reliable. This skill prepares students for science discussions both in the classroom and in their outdoor science experience. This activity is designed to be done before an outdoor science experience, such as outdoor science school, but can also be done after such an experience.
Evaluating Sources PDF