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Wall Street Journal Resources
Tools to Learn More & Use in Instruction
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The following resources can be found on the WSJ education pages for professors.
WSJ Professor Hub includes critical thinking resources above and How-To Guides.
WSJ Seminar Series highlights how to use WSJ's content to connect academic theory with real-world applications.
In the recent past, WSJ did a series of faculty seminars on how to use WSJ in their coursework.
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Three Ways to Use WSJ in Your Course: YouTube seminar
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Assessing Students Using the WSJ: YouTube seminar
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How Non-Business Majors Can Use the Journal: YouTube seminar
Critical Thinking Resource offers case studies you can utilize in your course. Currently available for business, finance, marketing, journalism, technology, and political science, each downloadable PDF includes WSJ articles along with a classroom application and questions.
Coronavirus Critical Thinking Resource For professors who are looking to incorporate recent Coronavirus coverage into their courses, we have created a Critical Thinking Resource with dedicated Coronavirus articles from The Wall Street Journal.
Assessment Tool offers you an easy way to assess your student’s knowledge of current events with WSJ articles. Each week, faculty contributors create and upload customizable multiple-choice and true/false quizzes. Additionally, quizzes are auto-graded; and grades can be exported to add to your grade book or LMS.
WSJ Context is the Journal’s first higher education-focused product allowing instructors to seamlessly integrate WSJ content into lectures through shared reading lists. WSJ Context makes it simple to curate relevant articles based on the courses you teach, allowing you to share important and timely news stories with students every week.
The Weekly Review newsletter is created by faculty contributors who source three to five discipline-specific WSJ articles each week and write a pedagogical application as well as critical thinking questions that allow you to integrate into your classroom discussions or exams.
How-To Guides offers you a trusted resource for interactive learning and student engagement during this time when remote teaching is more important than ever. Download the guides to discover simple and seamless ways to incorporate WSJ's broad and adverse content into online classes.
Checkology: Offers educational resources that help you understand the fundamentals of News Literacy and teach you how to distinguish between real news and fake news.
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WSJ Critical Thinking Case Studies: Thought-provoking articles to employ in classroom environments that will guarantee engaging discussions among students.
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News Literacy Project by WSJ: Educational videos that give students access to relevant information, such as how the WSJ ensures impartiality in its news.
WSJ Video Series: Last but not least, this link will lead you to a web page where several videos concerning the most recent updates around the world are showcased.