Jack Hassard wrote about the use of social media to spread fake news. Facebook, Twitter, and Google have become facilitators of fake news.
We know it is there. What can we do about it?
This is a very good analysis by a group of scholars at the Stanford History Education Group about civic reasoning, which explains how to avoid being hoaxed by fake news.
The questions that must always be present in any discussion is: How do you know? Who said so? What is the source? How reliable is the source? Can you confirm this information elsewhere? What counts as reliable evidence?
Many people use Wikipedia as a reliable source, but Wikipedia is crowdsourced and is not authoritative. I recall some years back when I gave a lecture in North Carolina that was named in honor of a distinguished senator of the state. The Wikipedia entry said he was a Communist, as were members of his staff. This was obviously the work of a troll. But it might not be obvious to a student researching a paper.
They write:
“Fake news is certainly a problem. Sadly, however, it’s not our biggest. Fact-checking organizations like Snopes and PolitiFact can help us detect canards invented by enterprising Macedonian teenagers,3 but the Internet is filled with content that defies labels like “fake” or “real.” Determining who’s behind information and whether it’s worthy of our trust is more complex than a true/false dichotomy.
“For every social issue, there are websites that blast half-true headlines, manipulate data, and advance partisan agendas. Some of these sites are transparent about who runs them and whom they represent. Others conceal their backing, portraying themselves as grassroots efforts when, in reality, they’re front groups for commercial or political interests. This doesn’t necessarily mean their information is false. But citizens trying to make decisions about, say, genetically modified foods should know whether a biotechnology company is behind the information they’re reading. Understanding where information comes from and who’s responsible for it are essential in making judgments of credibility.
“The Internet dominates young people’s lives. According to one study, teenagers spend nearly nine hours a day online.4 With optimism, trepidation, and, at times, annoyance, we’ve witnessed young people’s digital dexterity and astonishing screen stamina. Today’s students are more likely to learn about the world through social media than through traditional sources like print newspapers.5 It’s critical that students know how to evaluate the content that flashes on their screens.
“Unfortunately, our research at the Stanford History Education Group demonstrates they don’t.* Between January 2015 and June 2016, we administered 56 tasks to students across 12 states. (To see sample items, go to http://sheg.stanford.edu (link is external).) We collected and analyzed 7,804 student responses. Our sites for field-testing included middle and high schools in inner-city Los Angeles and suburban schools outside of Minneapolis. We also administered tasks to college-level students at six different universities that ranged from Stanford University, a school that rejects 94 percent of its applicants, to large state universities that admit the majority of students who apply.
“When thousands of students respond to dozens of tasks, we can expect many variations. That was certainly the case in our experience. However, at each level—middle school, high school, and college—these variations paled in comparison to a stunning and dismaying consistency. Overall, young people’s ability to reason about information on the Internet can be summed up in two words: needs improvement.
“Our “digital natives”† may be able to flit between Facebook and Twitter while simultaneously uploading a selfie to Instagram and texting a friend. But when it comes to evaluating information that flows through social media channels, they’re easily duped. Our exercises were not designed to assign letter grades or make hairsplitting distinctions between “good” and “better.” Rather, at each level, we sought to establish a reasonable bar that was within reach of middle school, high school, or college students. At each level, students fell far below the bar.”
They offer specific examples of hoaxes to show how easily people are duped.
They conclude:
“The senior fact checker at a national publication told us what she tells her staff: “The greatest enemy of fact checking is hubris”—that is, having excessive trust in one’s ability to accurately pass judgment on an unfamiliar website. Even on seemingly innocuous topics, the fact checker says to herself, “This seems official; it may be or may not be. I’d better check.”
“The strategies we recommend here are ways to fend off hubris. They remind us that our eyes deceive, and that we, too, can fall prey to professional-looking graphics, strings of academic references, and the allure of “.org” domains. Our approach does not turn students into cynics. It does the opposite: it provides them with a dose of humility. It helps them understand that they are fallible.
“The web is a sophisticated place, and all of us are susceptible to being taken in. Like hikers using a compass to make their way through the wilderness, we need a few powerful and flexible strategies for getting our bearings, gaining a sense of where we’ve landed, and deciding how to move forward through treacherous online terrain. Rather than having students slog through strings of questions about easily manipulated features, we should be teaching them that the World Wide Web is, in the words of web-literacy expert Mike Caulfield, “a web, and the way to establish authority and truth on the web is to use the web-like properties of it.”13 This is what professional fact checkers do.
“It’s what we should be teaching our students to do as well.”

Surely the place to start dealing with this problem is in the schools.
Young people should have classes which inform them about current affairs, by presenting all sides of controversial issues — regardless of whether they make someone ‘uncomfortable’ or make them ‘feel unsafe’. For example, liberals should have their noses rubbed in the Black crime rate and conservatives should have their noses rubbed in authentic cases of police brutality. Everyone should be given examples of how even mainstream news outlets can distort via selective reporting.
This is unlikely to happen, however, since administrators hate to attract controversy, and any issue which sees students opposed to more than one view is going to attract negative attention from all the people who adhere to a particular view and who don’t want to see anyone exposed to any other.
So perhaps an anodyne version of inoculating young people against the lies and half-truths circulating on the internet could be given by teaching the importance of seeking out dis-confirming evidence for one’s views.
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That’s a lot easier said than done. I am teaching just such a class this year, and the whining from parents and students about this course is driving me crazy. Parents DON’T WANT their kids learning about current events. They’re “too scary and depressing.” Parents have complained that I am “teaching my own opinion” when I teach that Confederate statues weren’t just to honor Confederate soliders, even though what I was teaching is what the vast majority of historians agree with. Kids burst into tears the second you talk about a possible sad event. And administrators will not back a teacher up on these things. This class has been a nightmare to teach, and I’m already sick of it.
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If you’re going to look at “black crime rates” (not exactly sure what that even means because for most areas whites commit per capita the same or more crimes; way more when it comes to financial crimes), you have to take into account the context of those crimes, starting with slavery, moving through Jim Crow, redlining and myriad other forms of discrimination, and you have to take a good hard look at how policing has played into that – both deliberate over policing and deliberate under policing. Black crime and police brutality are certainly opposite sides of the same coin, but they’re certainly not equivalent as you imply.
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Thank you, Dienne. I, too, was disturbed by doug’s comment, but didn’t know how to phrase it. Thank you for doing that.
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It is not only “fake” news but biased news reporting with elements of fake news — look at coverage on education. NY Times on verge of fake news so often — and in fact on Iraq weapons of mass destruction it was fake news. And what about how history is interpreted? Is there a point of view from the Russian side? Even if skeptical shouldn’t we be aware of that and when they charge western press with biased coverage we should at the very least take a look at all the biased and fake news and then be able to filter through it
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Norm –is it enough to to question, to wonder if, a newspaper is biased? I’m sure many readers of the New York Times are well-educated professionals who fancy themselves critical thinkers, yet who never see the red flags that you and I see as they read its education coverage. Does the disposition to be critical suffice to see through the bias? It seems to me that only insider knowledge, like what you and I possess as teachers who read a lot about education, gives the wherewithal to detect the areas of bias. The disposition is a start, but without lots and lots of knowledge, we’re all doomed to let biased and fake news enter undetected from time to time –or maybe often.
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Dienne, Threatened-out-West: We could no doubt have a good argument about the ugly reality of Black crime rates [perhaps I should say “violent crime” since it’s true that few Blacks commit sophisticated banking fraud!] — about which I think both of you are in denial — their causes, possible cures or amelioration … but until these things are discussed openly, our young people will continue to believe comforting myths, be these myths Right-wing or Left-wing. Of course, as Threatened has experienced, serious discussion of current affairs will NEVER be allowed in our secondary school classrooms, and is even being shut down on college campuses. So round-about, cautious, abstract attempts to teach young people how to think are all that is possible, and their impact will be minimal.
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Doug,
Thanks for reminding us of the white white-collar criminals who crashed the economy in 2008, destroying people’s lives and savings. No jail time for them!
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How can one evaluate the validity of websites about the world if one knows little about that world? General knowledge is the only fumigant for fake new in general; and specialized knowledge is the only fumigant for fake news about specific topics. It would be nice if there were an all-purpose fake-news-detecting skill that we could teach kids, but there isn’t. In researching for a lecture on Islam, I once realized that the information I was reading about Shia Islam sounded suspiciously pejorative and immediately suspected that the site was sponsored by the Saudis, notorious Shia haters. I was right. If you don’t know that there are legions of rabid Shia haters, or that the Saudis are Shia haters, this fake information might easily slip through.
By presenting the fake news problem as a skill problem, not a knowledge problem, these Stanford researchers perpetuate the problem. They write that most kids today get their knowledge of the world from the Internet. That’s because schools are abdicating their responsibility to give kids knowledge of the world. The best vaccine (not a perfect one) for the fake news problem is a corps of good teachers who undertake the long and slow process of furnishing kids’ minds with the TRUTH about the world we live in. We are not doing that now. The result is legions of Americans who believe that the world is flat, that contrails in the sky are poison “chem trails” that the government is using to kill us, that Trump’s lies are truths, etc.
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As Rob Kall of OpEdNews writes:
“Every day I flip on a news channel, hoping to see some journalism. I’m usually disappointed. Most of the time I see, from the major news networks, junk news. If there’s going to be a conversation about “Fake news,” there should also be a conversation about junk news. What is junk news? It’s a regurgitation or creation of distractions that take us away from the real problems we face in the world.”
See his article:
Printer Friendly Page for What about Junk News? | OpEdNews
https://www.opednews.com/populum/printer_friendly.php?content=a&id=217099
To his list I would add the two threats to our existence, nuclear weapons and climate chaos, which are vastly under-reported (except for escalating hysteria about North Korea).
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Yes, this is what teachers should be teaching their students, but the Bannonites, ALECs, Waltons, and Trumpists know that they can’t allow this to happen if they are to successfully fool as many people as possible and destroy civilization as we know it, and they are pulling out all the stops to make sure most of the people as they grow up never learn how to tell the difference between facts, half-truths, and total lies.
Greed is certainly a factor in the corporate war to end community based, democratic, transparent, non-profit, traditional public education, but religious and splinter group political agendas are also behind it.
Bannon was quoted in an interview admitting that he was a Leninist and wanted to destroy civilization so turmoil was a constant. The billionaires that support Bannon must think the same way.
For instance, PR Watch says ALEC Embraces Trumpism.
“ALEC Executive Director Lisa Nelson told ALEC funders and members that she was thrilled to report that the Trump administration “does have the potential to be an ALEC administration. It is full of the people and ideas we’ve advanced since 1973…Now is our time. And ALEC is ready.”
“ALEC allies are burrowed deep into the Trump administration. Trump VP, former Indiana Governor Mike Pence, is an ALEC booster and the Trump team has picked many with Koch and ALEC ties to fill key positions. Koch Congressman Mike Pompeo was picked for CIA chief, school voucher advocate and ALEC funder Betsy DeVos for Department of Education, and South Carolina Governor and ALEC stalwart Nikki Halley for U.N.”
https://www.prwatch.org/news/2017/02/13213/alec-embraces-trumpism
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We must establish trustworthy (non-corporate) media institutions, and improve general education to allow more critical thinking and discussion rather than simply trusting “authoritative” sources (which would seem to be any news source that asserts itself).
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What do you mean by “non-corporate”? Media institutions that are not incorporated? Media institutions that are closely held by individual owners?
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Preferably, media and journalism that are funded publicly and through individual and smaller donors, rather than through a few oligarchic figures and their business associates.
The same way political campaigns need to be funded.
Otherwise, the mainstream news (and the politicians) will simply continue to serve profit over people — it’s survival in the industry — and we’ll get this sorry excuse for “journalism” and “government” that we have today…
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