Loading...
Chloé spotted another website called Old Tales of the North from 1999. It said the Arctic fox was endangered everywhere. But the National Geographic article (from this year) said their population was growing. “The 1999 info is old,” Chloé noted. “We need recent facts.”
That afternoon, Léo went home and saw an ad saying: “Click here – you won a free video game!” évaluation internet cm2
Chloé added: “We checked the author, the date, and compared sources. That’s how you win at Évaluation Internet .” Chloé spotted another website called Old Tales of
Léo found a random forum where someone wrote: “Arctic foxes can fly for three seconds.” He laughed. “That doesn’t match anything else we’ve read. And there’s no proof. Fake!” “The 1999 info is old,” Chloé noted
The first result was a colorful blog called Super Cool Animal Facts . It said: “The Arctic fox loves to eat rainbow spaghetti and marshmallows that fall from the sky.”
Léo proudly said: “It eats lemmings and fish. Not marshmallows. And we learned something else: how to tell if a website is lying.”
Just then, Madame Berger came by. “Time’s up! What did you learn about the Arctic fox?”