
Shawn Lee and his AP U.S. History students at Seattleās Ballard High School were gearing up to attend at the University of Washington in March when concerns over the coronavirus forced the to rethink its planned in-person event.
āWe were all ramped up and ready,ā Lee said in a recent interview about MisinfoDay, an event first held in 2019 and designed to educate high school students, teachers and librarians about how to be better information consumers and less likely to share misinformation.
Just as the CIP had to shift gears with MisinfoDay 2020 ā the planned in-person student event in March turned into a June webinar designed for educators ā Lee pivoted as well, organizing his own virtual āMisinfoDay Jr.ā event in May tailored for his two AP U.S. History sections at Ballard High School. It was the culmination of a ā āā Lee developed with Liz Crouse, a librarian at Seattleās Nathan Hale High School who was instrumental in organizing and launching MisinfoDay when she was a Master of Library and Information Science student at the 911±¬ĮĻĶų.
āThere are simple fact-checking skills people can use to guard themselves against misinformation, but most people donāt know them,ā Crouse said. āWeāre just starting to teach these skills in schools, so many adults especially arenāt familiar with them. Thatās why MisinfoDay Jr. is so exciting.ā
Leeās students had already taken their AP exams, so the former paralegal-turned-teacher was anticipating that it might be difficult to keep his students engaged for the remainder of the school year, something that was more challenging this year when schools in Washington state shifted to remote learning in March.

āFor the students who participated, they really saw it as the community service opportunity that it was: Educating their parents and community about good digital citizenship,ā Lee said.
Along with lessons and insights from Lee and Jevin West, a 911±¬ĮĻĶų associate professor who serves as the CIPās director, students shared presentations about understanding confirmation bias; investigating sources and claims; how to find better news coverage; how to trace the source of information, photos and videos; and better understanding the ways algorithms influence what you see on certain websites and social media platforms.
One of those Ballard High School students was Mercedes Tucker, a rising senior who said in an interview that the MisinfoDay programming is āvery aligned with whatās going on in the world right now.ā
Tucker said that the lessons from the Ballard High School MisinfoDay Jr. event continue to resonate. āWhen I hear a claim, I now think: āIs that true? Did that actually happen?ā I think I look at claims with more specificity,ā Tucker said.
With so much misinformation being shared on social media and elsewhere online, Lee said those skills are incredibly important for high schoolers as theyāre becoming adults and more savvy information consumers.
āIām horrified by the amount of garbage there is out there,ā Lee said. āYouāre not 100% going to know everything. But you can take the information thatās out there, run it through the filter and make your own conclusion.ā
Building off the successes at Ballard High School and fueled by the desire to share important lessons from MisinfoDay more broadly, Lee pursued funding from the Washington Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction to jumpstart a new K-12 educator training initiative thatās called Teachers for an Informed Public.
Lee has recruited additional teachers and librarians from across Washington state and is gearing up for the first Teachers for an Informed Public meeting, a virtual convening Aug. 3 that will be followed by more group discussion. Some of the groupās work will involve scaling the digital survival skills curriculum for middle school and K-5 students.
Inspired by the CIPās broader mission to raise public awareness around misinformation and disinformation and bolstered by his own experiences developing the digital survival skills curriculum and MisinfoDay Jr. at Ballard High School, Lee said he wants to inspire more teachers, librarians and other educators not only elsewhere in Washington state, but across the nation.
āI see this work as so urgent,ā Lee said.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
- Interested in the work of Teachers for an Informed Public? Email misinfoday@uw.edu and weāll be happy to connect you with Shawn Lee at Ballard High School.
- Want to participate in the next MisinfoDay? and .
- Explore the Digital Survival Skills curriculum from Liz Crouse and Shawn Lee via OER Commons | ; ; ; and .
This story was originally published on the .