Social Studies HS Guide

Crosswalk: Historical Thinking Skills & News Literacy Skills

Historical Thinking Skill/ News Literacy Skill

Prompts

Guiding Questions

Student Abilities

Example Application

The author probably believes… I think the audience is… Based on the source information, I think the author might . . . I do/don’t trust this document… This source follows these standards of quality of journalism… This source is/is not biased because… Based on the background information, I understand this document differently because . . .

A student evaluating a Civil War-era newspaper would consider its political affiliation, just as they would assess whether a modern news website adheres to journalistic standards. A student researching World War I propaganda posters would compare their sources to how social media influencers promote certain perspectives today. A student analyzing a 1920s political speech would consider Prohibition’s impact, just as they would verify whether a viral news image has been

Identify the author’s position, intent, and credibility. Evaluate the trustworthiness of a source based on bias and reliability. Distinguish between high-quality journalism and sources that lack credibility.

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Who wrote this?

What is the author’s perspective? Why was it written?

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Sourcing/ Source

Is it reliable?

Has it been confirmed by a credible source? Does this source follow journalistic standards? Is the source biased?

When and where was this document created? How might the circumstances in which it was created affect its content? Is the context accurate?

Understand how background information influences meaning. Recognize that both historical documents and news articles are

Contextualization/ Context

News Literacy Project. (n.d.). RumorGuard . News Literacy Project. Retrieved April 28, 2025, from https://rumorguard.org © 2025 Jodi Ide, Teacher Specialist, Canyons School District. All rights reserved. Sharing or reproduction permitted with aut hor’s permission.

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