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This activity helps you practice two key skills that every university student needs:
Information Literacy – learning how to find and evaluate credible, peer-reviewed sources.
Critical Thinking – asking good questions at different levels of thinking, not just memorizing.
We’ll connect these skills to the Diversity Podcasts for Student Athletes, so you can see how ideas from research link to real stories and experiences.
In a previous class, you will have formed a group of three students.
Pick one podcast episode from the Diversity series.
Identify a key theme or issue in that episode (for example: inclusion, resilience, stereotypes, or balancing sport and academics).
Listen to the library session/lesson on “Information Literacy.”
Individually, use library databases or Google Scholar to search for a peer-reviewed article or academic book chapter that connects to your theme.
As a group, evaluate the articles you find and select the one that adds the most value to your podcast theme.
Before the next class, each group member should read the article carefully.
Identify its key contributions (What does it argue? What evidence does it use? How does it connect to the podcast theme?).
As a group, make a 6-question quiz about your article.
Each question should match one level of Bloom’s Taxonomy:
Remembering → a fact or detail
Understanding → a summary in your own words
Applying → using the article in a new example
Analyzing → breaking down strengths/weaknesses
Evaluating → judging the article’s value or credibility
Creating → designing a new idea or research question

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Scholarly / Peer-Reviewed |
Popular / Not Scholarly (but possibly still credible!) |
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Review Process |
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Audience /
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Content |
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Sources |
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Examples |
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