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AI Literacy

Tips and Frameworks

As you evaluate the accuracy and credibility of an AI tool and is responses, consider some of the following questions: 

Does it cite its sources? Are they real or hallucinations? AI can hallucinate or fabricate informationpresenting imaginary or nonsensical statements as facts.

Who is the intended audience and what is the rhetorical purpose? Test how the tool's responses change if you tweak the context for your prompt. 

Recognize and monitor for bias. Use prompt engineering to test out and attempt to correct for its biases. What AREN'T you seeing? What voices, perspectives, and accounts of the world are over or under-represented?

Try lateral reading: Explore outside your source to verify its information. As Michael Caulfeld says in Web Literacy for Student Fact Checkers, "Once you get to the source of a claim, read what other people say about the source (publication, author, etc.). The truth is in the network." 

The SIFT method asks you to make "four moves " when evaluating a source: 

SIFT Method

 

 

Learn more about the SIFT method - U Chicago LibGuide

The SIFT method was created by Mike Caulfield. The image above is copied from his materials under a CC BY 4.0 license.

The ROBOT Test - Evaluate the legitimacy of AI tools by examining: Reliability, Objectivity, Bias, Ownership, and Type 

ACT UP Method - Evaluate sources from a social justice lens by looking at their Author, Currency, Truth, whether it's Unbiased, and Privilege

The CRAAP Test - If it's CRAAP, then it's OK! - Evaluate sources according to these criteria: Current, Reliable, Authoritative, Accurate, and Purpose

Information Literacy Framework (ACRL) - Outlines six frames central to information literacy: Authority Is Constructed and Contextual, Information Creation as a Process, Information Has Value, Research as Inquiry, Scholarship as Conversation, Searching as Strategic Exploration