English

Cards (43)

  • Satire/Parody - no intention to cause harm but have the potential to fool.
  • content purporting to be satire will evade the fact-checkers and frequently over time, the original context gets lost.
  • Misleading Content - to frame an issue or an individual.
  • Impostor Content - genuine sources are impersonated.
  • Imposter Content increases the chance that people will trust the content without checking the content.
  • Fabricated Content - designed to deceive and cause harm.
  • In Fabricated content, the new product/article is 100% false.
  • False connection - headlines , visuals, and or captions don't support the content.
  • False connection - claims about content via a sensational headline, only to find the headline is horribly disconnected from the actual article or piece of content.
  • False context - happens during a breaking news event when old imagery is re-shared.
  • False context - genuine content is shared with false contextual information.
  • Manipulated content - genuine information or imagery is manipulated to deceive.
  • Manipulated content - genuine content is tampered with or doctored in some way.
  • Listening attentively to a group discussion is very important.
  • Provoking Questions - question that make the other person assess, diagnose and think of a possible action.
  • Compare and Contrast - question about similarities and differences between ideas.
  • Interpretive Evaluative - question about intention or goals of the author.
  • Conceptual Changes - expresses opinions
  • Personal Exploration - question based on one’s personal idea or exploration; encourage personal connection with the subject of the question.
  • Moral/Ethical Dilemmas - question that make the other person think whether something is morally or ethically correct.
  • SOAPSTone method stands for (Speaker, Occasion, Audience, Purpose, Subject and Tone).
  • SOAPSTone - is a method which can be used to determine the truthfulness and accuracy of the material viewed.
  • SOAPSTone is a method for evaluating credibility of persuasive essays in conventional print and media sources.
  • Conflict - a struggle or problem faced by the main character.
  • A conflict can make it difficult to form a positive and healthy relationship.
  • There are two categories of conflict: Internal and External
  • Internal conflict - refers to the opposition coming from within.
  • External conflict - refers to the opposition between an individual and some outside force.
  • Theme - the main idea that flows through the narrative and connects the components of the story together.
  • The 6 Types of Literary Conflict:
    Person vs. Self, Person vs. Person, Person vs. Society, Person vs. Nature, Person vs. Technology, Person vs. Supernatural.
  • Person vs. Person - occurs between two characters in a story.
  • Person vs. Self - conflict where a character is their own adversary.
  • Conflicts have aspects of society or society as a whole as the root of all the other conflicts in the story.
  • Character faces challenges or obstacles that are caused by natural forces, such as weather, animals, or the environment.
  • Character faces technology (such as a robot, a machine, or a mechanical failure) and must prevail against it.
  • Character battles that which is beyond nature.
  • Speaker - communicating/speaking to the audience.
  • Occasion - time or place; context that prompted the author or speaker to create the material.
  • Audience - group to which the materials are intended.
  • Purpose - reason for the author in creating the material.