For some of us, the all-consuming preoccupation with leaving cert exams have given way to other things. Our kids will soon be exposed to new ideas and unfamiliar sources.
Our kids learned that misinformation and disinformation exists, but it didn’t go as far identifying the more subtle (and common) forms of it. I’d appreciate any concrete ideas for what to teach them, and how to make it interesting. In my experience, if the message is in any way long winded I lose their attention.
I’ve drafted something which I’ll put in a comment below. But basically what served me well growing up was learning about how bias emerges in myself (fallacies, emotional reasoning, basic psychology) as well as in the media (journalists with a pattern of chanting for one perspective, absent or misinterpreted sources, history of credibility, “Chinese whispers” on social media, etc).
Ideas for things to teach:
Besides explaining the above, I’m thinking of exercises or examples such as the following:
Regarding point #4, I asked an LLM for the most common logical fallacies that are use to propagate misinformation in the EU today. I asked it to include intentional disinformation as well as unintentional social misinformation, like a friend might share. It came up with this list:
In both disinformation (intentionally deceptive) and unintentional misinformation in Europe today, several logical fallacies frequently appear. These fallacies manipulate reasoning, exploit cognitive biases, and spread misleading narratives. Here are the most common ones:
1. False Dilemma (Black-or-White Fallacy)
2. Appeal to Fear (Scare Tactics)
3. Hasty Generalization
4. Ad Hominem (Personal Attack)
5. Slippery Slope
6. Appeal to Authority (False Expertise)
7. Cherry-Picking (Suppressed Evidence)
8. Straw Man
9. Post Hoc Ergo Propter Hoc (False Cause)
10. Bandwagon Fallacy (Appeal to Popularity)
Why These Fallacies Spread in Europe
How to Counter Them?
Would you like examples specific to a certain European country or issue?