Low-Prep Lessons for Teaching Research Skills (That Actually Stick)
Teaching research skills can feel like herding caffeinated cats… while the internet launches confetti cannons of misinformation in the background. The good news: you don’t need a weeks-long “research unit” to build strong researchers. You need repeatable, low-prep routines.
Below are 10 low-prep lessons (15–45 minutes each) that you can drop into almost any subject. Each one includes a quick setup, clear steps, and a “teacher move” that keeps it genuinely low-prep.
Lesson 1: The 60-Second “Stop & Predict” Source Check (SIFT: Stop)
Skill focus: pausing before believing/sharing
Prep (2 minutes): Put any trending headline/post on the screen (or hand students a printed screenshot).
Do this:
Students read silently for 30 seconds.
Ask: “What do you want to be true here?” and “What makes this tempting to believe?”
Students rate credibility (1–5) without opening a browser.
Reveal the rule: Stop first—then investigate. (That’s the SIFT habit.)
Quick assessment: Students write one sentence: “I should pause here because ___.”
Low-prep teacher move: Keep a folder of 10 screenshots you can reuse all year.
Lesson 2: Lateral Reading Speed-Run (Open a New Tab—On Purpose)
Skill focus: verifying “who’s behind this” using lateral reading
Prep (5 minutes): Pick one unfamiliar website related to your topic.
Do this:
Model the “new tab” habit: leave the site and search about the site.
Students follow a 3-step checklist:
Who runs it?
What do reputable sources say about it?
Can I find better coverage elsewhere?
Students decide: trust / partial trust / don’t trust, with one piece of evidence.
Extension (easy): Compare Wikipedia’s “About” info with one additional source (triangulation).
Lesson 3: CRAAP Test “Two Tabs, One Winner” Challenge
Skill focus: evaluating sources (Currency, Relevance, Authority, Accuracy, Purpose)
Prep (5 minutes): Provide two sources on the same question (one strong, one weak).
Do this:
Students score each source using a CRAAP checklist.
They must pick a winner and justify with two criteria (ex: Authority + Purpose).
Share out quickly: “What was the giveaway?”
Low-prep teacher move: Reuse the same “weak” source all year. Different classes love catching it.
Lesson 4: Search Smarter in 10 Minutes (Operators That Save Lives… Academically)
Skill focus: better keyword selection + narrowing results
Prep (2 minutes): Put a messy research question on the board.
Do this:
Students brainstorm 5 keywords + 2 synonyms.
Teach three operators:
quotes for exact phrases
minus sign to exclude junk
site:to limit to trusted domains
Students run two searches and compare which is better and why.
Exit ticket: “My best search string was: ___ because ___.”
Lesson 5: The “Better Coverage” Triangle (One Claim, Three Sources)
Skill focus: triangulation and cross-checking
Prep (5 minutes): Choose a claim (health, history, science, current events—anything).
Do this:
Students find three independent sources that address the claim.
They label each:
evidence-based reporting?
opinion/analysis?
original data?
Students write: “After better coverage, I think the claim is ___.”
Teacher move: Let them use one “starter” reliable source (reduces flailing).
Lesson 6: Primary Source Snap-Analysis (Observe–Reflect–Question)
Skill focus: reading primary sources with structure
Prep (3 minutes): Pick one primary source image/document (LOC is perfect).
Do this:
Students complete three quick prompts:
Observe: What do you notice?
Reflect: What might it mean?
Question: What do you still wonder?
Pair-share answers, then add one “further investigation” question.
Low-prep teacher move: Use the same tool for photos, letters, posters—anything.
Lesson 7: The “Trace It Back” Image/Quote Hunt
Skill focus: finding original context (misquotes, cropped images, reposted graphs)
Prep (2 minutes): Bring in one meme, quote, or chart.
Do this:
Students try to locate the earliest/original posting or publication context.
They report:
original creator (if possible)
original date/context
what changed in reposts
Debrief: “How did context change meaning?”
Optional tool: Use the Wayback Machine to show how pages change over time.
Lesson 8: News Literacy Mini-Lab (What Is News vs. Everything Else?)
Skill focus: identifying news, opinion, sponsored content, and misinformation
Prep (5 minutes): Choose 4 short examples (headline + snippet).
Do this:
Students sort into categories: news / opinion / ad / “hmm.”
Teach 2–3 quick “quality” markers (evidence, sourcing, transparency).
If you have access, Checkology lessons make this incredibly plug-and-play.
Low-prep teacher move: Use the same categories weekly as a bell ringer.
Lesson 9: Scholarly Source Scavenger Hunt (Without the Tears)
Skill focus: locating credible academic material + understanding what “scholarly” means
Prep (3 minutes): Put one research question on the board.
Do this:
Students search the question in Google Scholar.
They must find:
one scholarly article/book preview
one research summary/abstract
one “cited by” trail they can follow
Debrief: “How is this different from a regular Google result?”
Bonus (free): JSTOR’s open/free content is great when paywalls show up.
Lesson 10: Citation in 15 Minutes (MLA “Good Enough to Hand In”)
Skill focus: avoiding plagiarism + building a Works Cited
Prep (2 minutes): Provide 2 sources students used recently.
Do this:
Teach the two big rules:
in-text citation exists
Works Cited is formatted consistently (hanging indent, alphabetical, etc.)
Students create citations using:
Purdue OWL as the rulebook
ZoteroBib as the quick generator
Students do a final “human check” against OWL rules (so it’s not blind copy/paste).
Exit ticket: one correctly formatted Works Cited entry.
For more MLA lessons, click here.
Simple Assessment Options (Still Low-Prep)
1-minute reflection: “Today I learned to ___ so I can ___.”
Credibility claim: “This source is reliable/unreliable because ___.”
Mini rubric: Evidence (1–2), Reasoning (1–2), Citation (1–2).
Conclusion
If you steal nothing else from this post, steal this: research skills grow best through short, repeated reps. A 10-minute lateral reading routine every week will outperform a one-time research “unit” that students forget by Thursday. (Also: your future self will thank you for not reinventing the research wheel every semester.)






