New report from 海角论坛 aims to combat rampant misinformation about science
In the early days of the novel coronavirus鈥 spread through the United States, .
From presidential news conferences to every nook of social media, COVID-19 misinformation has been rampant. This has led to the need for governmental experts like Anthony Fauci, head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, to issue clarifications and corrections.
鈥淲ith the rapid spread of misinformation, it鈥檚 hard to keep up,鈥 said听, the Stephen H. Crocker Professor of Psychology and Education at the 海角论坛 School of Education.
While media and scientific literacy can go a long way in training people to diagnose misinformation, Sinatra鈥檚 work examines what is needed to improve students鈥 evaluations of evidence and claims. Sinatra and other experts say we are now in a 鈥減ost-truth era,鈥 in which objective facts are less influential in shaping public opinion than appeals to emotion and personal belief.
To counter this, Sinatra and other experts have been developing methods to alter how science is taught in schools. One of the tools they are trying to elevate is a simple but powerful one: plausibility judgments.
How plausibility judgments can combat COVID-19 misinformation
While different kinds of judgments鈥攕uch as source validity, credibility, reliability and truthfulness鈥攁re related to plausibility judgments, plausibility is distinct: It asks a person to look at the evidence and see which set of competing claims has better support. Imagine, for instance, how a jury weighs the cases of the prosecution against that of the defense.
鈥淧eople should be judging the plausibility of claims such as, 鈥榳e can have a vaccine developed in weeks,鈥 or that you can take vitamin C as a prevention measure, or worse, gargle with bleach,鈥 Sinatra said. 鈥淪top, think and question whether it would be safe to consume bleach, and you would reevaluate that one very quickly.鈥
In a new paper for the journal听Educational Psychologist, Sinatra and co-author Doug Lombardi, an associate professor at the University of Maryland, College Park, argue that .
These experts hope to strengthen the usefulness of plausibility judgments through an instructional tool that helps students not only to evaluate competing claims but also the underlying evidence of those claims. The system, known as Model-Evidence Link, has shown success in deepening student science knowledge in early trials done in middle- and high-school science classrooms.
The similarities between COVID-19 and climate change
Initially, Sinatra and Lombardi had seen this method as especially useful for combating misinformation around climate change. The United Nations has deemed climate change as a major threat to human rights, but a host of misinformation has tried to undermine the听听that human-caused climate change is a problem.
That鈥檚 still a goal, but Sinatra also sees a number of parallels between public understanding of climate change and public understanding of the COVID-19 pandemic.
鈥淔or both issues, too many people are trusting their social media circles or politicians and not the experts,鈥 Sinatra said, pointing to how some political figures are suggesting dates by which most businesses will reopen.
鈥淗opefully this will end sooner rather than later, but it鈥檚 not science-based to pick a date,鈥 she said. 鈥淎s Dr. Fauci has suggested, the virus will determine the time course.鈥
And, Sinatra adds, while the public response to COVID-19 was in many places supportive of stay-at-home policies, it is not clear how this might translate to public support for climate change mitigation actions.
"COVID-19 presents a clear and imminent threat to health, unlike the slower roll of climate impacts on human health and wellbeing," she added. "That said, the we are seeing are a daily reminder of the impact of humans on the environment and perhaps makes the need to adopt more sustainable practices more evident."