“…In U.S. schools, many K–12 students are encouraged to search only in library databases or on .edu websites for their research papers; otherwise, they are told to evaluate websites based on domain name and features such as currency and relevance, often arranged in a checklist or as an acronym (Breakstone et al., ; Metzger, ). These checklists assume that credibility judgments can and should be made by closely examining a single webpage alone, and the Web 2.0 perspectives of these heuristics are often misleading in the current Web 3.0 environment (Breakstone et al., ; Kohnen, in press). A decade's worth of research studies have found that in the absence of adequate instruction, students struggle to make credibility judgments (e.g., Brand‐Gruwel, Wopereis, & Walraven, ; Eynon & Geniets, ; Thomm & Bromme, ).…”