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Prob/Stats Digital Citizenship: Analyzing Bias

Evaluating Websites, Analyzing Bias, Citations

Analyzing Bias

Bias

Read the definitions (used with permission from the source listed at the bottom of this page)

  • Bias is a tendency to believe that some people, ideas, etc., are better than others, which often results in treating some people unfairly.

 

  • Explicit bias refers to attitudes and beliefs (positive or negative) that we consciously or deliberately hold and express about a person or group. Explicit and implicit biases can sometimes contradict each other.

 

  • Implicit bias includes attitudes and beliefs (positive or negative) about other people, ideas, issues, or institutions that occur outside of our conscious awareness and control, which affect our opinions and behavior. Everyone has implicit biases—even people who try to remain objective (e.g., judges and journalists)—that they have developed over a lifetime. However, people can work to combat and change these biases.

 

  • Confirmation bias, or the selective collection of evidence, is our subconscious tendency to seek and interpret information and other evidence in ways that affirm our existing beliefs, ideas, expectations, and/or hypotheses. Therefore, confirmation bias is both affected by and feeds our implicit biases. It can be most entrenched around beliefs and ideas that we are strongly attached to or that provoke a strong emotional response.

Materials adapted from Facing History and Ourselves

 

Individual Activity: Confirmation Bias

Step One: Watch & Read

  • Watch the video linked below.

The Smell Test

 
 

Abstract

Discerning fact from fiction in news and online content has never been more challenging. From "pizzagate"--false reports of a child sex ring operating in a DC pizza parlor--and creepy clown attacks to retweeted election headlines touting events that never happened, fake news is rampant. Librarians have an opportunity to take leadership in the current crisis. As proven authorities on information literacy, library professionals can help students analyze news authenticity. It's time to step up to the plate. That requires expertise--and perseverance.

 

 

 
 
 

 

Jacobson, Linda. "The Smell Test." School Library Journal 63.01 (2017): 24,n/a. ProQuest. Web. 25 Oct. 2017.