Activity description

1. Learners will first be asked to come up with a few shows, newspapers or online sources that they often use or hear about. The trainer could suggest some of them in order to kick off the activity. 

2. Upon visiting some of these, preferably using a screen sharing tool or a projector, the trainer will call the learners’ attention to visual and linguistic elements, and a discussion about their frequency or absence will follow. Learners will also be encouraged to look for “fun fact”, science or news pieces in their social media feeds. Then, by collecting images, headlines and phrases and taking them out of context (eg by making a digital collage), the trainer can prompt learners to think how a quick glance or an instinctive click on such stimuli can form one’s perception and make them skip the fact-checking part of the information process. Moreover, learners will be asked to discern visual from linguistic cues and explain which are more potent and in which kind of situations.

3. The final step is taking these lessons and implementing them on some kind of “cautionary example”: the learners will be presented with reputable news pieces and then try and twist them according to different interests or worldviews. Examples of prompts would be:

-How would an extremely religious person twist this article?
-How would someone with industry interests use this piece to make profit?
-Who else would read more into this piece of news and what would their fears be?

Using such prompts, the learners can write their own piece of malignant or ignorant misinformation, sprinkling in the visual and linguistic cues they found in the first steps. Thus, they can witness the creation of misinformation and reverse the analytical process to gain a deeper understanding of it.

60 min.
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