Communication Skills Clarity and Conciseness Quick win

How To Sift Through Media Bullsh*t

Learn How To Be a Responsible Consumer of Information

Enroll in How To Sift Through Media Bullsh*t to empower yourself with the skills to discern truth from deception in today's media landscape, ensuring you become a savvy and responsible consumer of information.

15 lessons 1.4 hours 1 preview lessons
About this course

A society is only as good as its citizens, and our intellectual contributions or lack thereof have far-reaching effects. While this short course is unlikely to make you a master of parsing information, it's a heck of a good start!


Don't Fall for Fake News Again!



  • Learn important terms such as fake news site, click bait, echo chamber, fallacies, and more.

  • Learn how our cognitive biases get in the way when it comes to accepting reality

  • Learn how to quickly evaluate any information source

  • Learn how to ask the right questions when deciding how much weight to give information

  • Learn how to spot when you are being misled, deceived, manipulated, or outright lied to


Learn How To Be a Responsible Consumer of Information


A fact is a fact, right? Unfortunately, it's not that simple. A "fact" is primarily defined as "a thing that is indisputably the case." The problem with that definition, is that virtually anything can be disputed, and most things are. But the legal language of "beyond reasonable doubt" applies to this definition. Many times, especially on the Internet, facts that are disputed are done so WITHOUT reasonable doubt. For example, there is an entire organization devoted to disputing the fact that the earth is NOT flat. 


A secondary definition of "fact" is "a piece of information used as evidence or as part of a report or news article." These "facts" are still "things that are indisputably the case," or are supposed to be, but used in this context, facts are used to support a theory, conclusion, or opinion. For example, one might argue that the government is out to enslave its citizens. They may offer several facts to support that argument including the facts that the government can imprison people, the government HAS imprisoned people, and the government has no plans to stop imprisoning people. No reasonable person would dispute those facts, but that doesn't mean that the facts adequately support the argument or claim.


Very little information we consume is straight fact. We consume opinion, commentary, satire, gossip, conspiracy theories, marketing copy, and other forms of non-facts. Even when we are given facts, it can be done in such way to mislead, deceive, and manipulate where we are led to develop a false sense of confidence in our conclusions based on these facts.


Oh, by the way, "alternative facts," are falsehoods.


We may not have a legal obligation when it comes to being a responsible consumer of information. But one can easily argue that we do have a moral obligation. A society is only as good as its citizens, and our intellectual contributions or lack thereof have far-reaching effects. While this short course is unlikely to make you a master of parsing information, it's a heck of a good start!

15
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1
preview lessons
4
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Communication Skills
primary category
Curriculum preview

Imported lessons, grouped into real sections.

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Course Lessons

1 lesson

1. Lesson 1

Know Your Own Biases

11 lessons

2. Introduction
4 min Preview
We're not blank slates. We all bring to the table a lifetime of values, beliefs, and background information that play a big part in how we interpret new information. In a…
3. Availability Heuristic
3 min
This is the tendency to overestimate the likelihood of events with greater "availability" in memory, which can be influenced by how recent the memories are or how unusual…
4. Availability cascade
3 min
This is a self-reinforcing process in which a collective belief gains more and more plausibility through its increasing repetition in public discourse (or "repeat somethi…
5. Belief bias
3 min
This is an effect where someone's evaluation of the logical strength of an argument is biased by the believability of the conclusion.
6. Bias blind spot
3 min
This is the tendency to see oneself as less biased than other people, or to be able to identify more cognitive biases in others than in oneself.
7. Confirmation bias
3 min
This is the tendency to search for, interpret, focus on, and remember information in a way that confirms one's preconceptions.
8. Dunning–Kruger effect
3 min
This is the tendency for unskilled individuals to overestimate their own ability and the tendency for experts to underestimate their own ability.
9. Halo effect
3 min
This is the tendency for a person's positive or negative traits to "spill over" from one personality area to another in others' perceptions of them.
+ 3 more lessons in this section

Know the Source

2 lessons

13. Know the Source
13 min
People and media sources share information that is entertaining/interesting. Billions of things happen every day that are neither entertaining nor interesting, thus do no…
14. Scientific Studies: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver
20 min
John Oliver discusses how and why media outlets so often report untrue or incomplete information as science.

Know When You Are Being Misled

1 lesson

15. Know When You Are Being Misled, Deceived, Manipulated, or Outright Lied To
14 min
A "lie" is only the tip of the metaphorical iceberg when it comes to things that are not true. Misinformation comes in many forms, and in this lesson, I'll show you how t…
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