Transcript Fake News
Fake News
Warm-Up: Respond on binder paper
• “Fake news” has become a sudden and popular phrase within the last
4-5 months. What is “fake news”? Who talks about it? List all the
different ways news could be considered “fake.” Are they all equally
fake, or are there degrees of “fake news”?
Native Advertising
• material in an online publication
which resembles the
publication's editorial content
but is paid for by an advertiser
and intended to promote the
advertiser's product.
• "native advertising is blurring the
lines between advertising and
content"
100% False
• False rumors
• Celebrity “deaths”
• Conspiracy theories
• Made-up stories to make another
person look bad
• Chain-mail “urban legends”
Slanted and Biased / Propaganda
• A mixture of partial truths and lies written in a way to criticize or
celebrate one political side
• “How The Donald Saved Christmas”
• “The White House Wins the War on Christmas”
Misused / Sloppy data
• Based on studies that are not yet proven
• i.e. tested on mice, not people
• Based on studies with inaccurate substitutions
• 1 in 5 CEOs are Psychopaths, Study Finds
• Study was based off survey of supply chain professionals, not CEOs
Clickbait
• Sensational headline
• Strange news about ordinary people /
unnecessary news
• Each item of separate page you need
to click through
• Excess number of ads / popups
• May have to complete survey in order
to read
• Often untrue or exaggerated headline
• YOU’LL NEVER BELIEVE WHAT HAPPENED
NEXT
CRAP test
• * Currency • How recent is the information?
• How recently has the website been
updated?
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• * Reliability • Is content of the resource
primarily opinion? Is it balanced?
• Does the creator provide
references or sources for data or
quotations?
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* Authority Who is the creator or author?
What are the credentials?
Who is the published or sponsor?
What is the publisher’s interest (if
any) in this information?
• Are there advertisements on the
website?
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• * Purpose/Point of View • Is this fact or opinion?
• Is it biased?
• Is the creator/author trying to sell
you something?
Your task
• Read each of the 4 articles provided to you
• In groups, identify the articles as either “real” or “fake” based on first
instincts. Rank them from most “real” to most “fake.” Fill this in on
the chart.
• Then, on laptops, investigate the source of the article and use the
CRAP test. Go to english3inj3.weebly.com and find the links to the
articles in the “quarter 3” section
• Discuss amongst your group if your belief in the articles changed
based on the source of the article. Fill this is on the chart.