You Have to Do Your Research: What are the Stakes? | Jeannette Lee Parikh | 7 Min Read

A few questions all of us who work in educational institutions must ask ourselves: What kind of adults do we want our students to become? How do we ensure that our students develop critical thinking skills that are grounded in sound research? Fortunately for us as a species, critical thinking and good research skills can be learned. To understand the stakes for doing so, COVID-19 has provided some examples from popular culture that should motivate us to re-examine and double down on what we do in schools.

By now, you have heard some version of “you have to do your research,” typically from a celebrity who is COVID vaccine-resistant. For instance, Nicki Minaj, a rapper, claimed that she will take the COVID-19 vaccine once she’s done enough research. What does Minaj’s use of the term “research” mean? Does it point to peer-reviewed journal articles written by epidemiologists, virologists, as well as public health and other medical professionals? Does it point to reviewing the medical data on infection rates, hospitalizations, and vaccine effectiveness? I suspect not. However, what’s important here is that Minaj’s redefinition of the word research is problematic for students.

While we don’t know where Minaj went…

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Jeannette Parikh

Jeannette M E Lee Parikh, Ph.D., is the assistant editor for Intrepid Ed News as well as the chair of the English department and head of community reading at The Cambridge School of Weston (CSW). Before CSW, where she has been since the fall of 2010, she taught at the college level for six years. She is an ISTE Certified Teacher and OER advocate. She is an experienced practitioner of integrating department-wide academic technology that serves pedagogical and curriculum goals. Her teaching philosophy exists at the intersection of the science of learning and cultivating creative thinking, joy, curiosity, playfulness, and self-awareness in all learners. She has presented at conferences on the importance of deep reading, critical listening, authentic discussion, and strategic writing in the 21st-century classroom.