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Showing 1 to 15 of 18 results Save | Export
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Biddlestone, Mikey; Roozenbeek, Jon; van der Linden, Sander – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2023
Psychological inoculation has proven effective at reducing susceptibility to misinformation. We present a novel storytelling approach to inoculation against susceptibility to the conjunction fallacy (d[subscript meta-analysis] = 0.82), a known cognitive predictor of conspiracy beliefs. In Study 1 (Pilot; N = 161), a narrative inoculation (vs.…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Deception, Ethics, Information Sources
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Dozono, Tadashi – Theory Into Practice, 2021
When classrooms fail to provide racially marginalized students with frameworks that explain their daily experiences, sometimes students turn to conspiracy theories, however inaccurate. This article links marginalized students' critiques of society and paranoid readings of the world with civic reasoning. Through queer and critical race theory, this…
Descriptors: Civics, Minority Group Students, LGBTQ People, Student Attitudes
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Katja H-W Skjølberg; Irene Trysnes; Elise Frølich Furrebø – Journal of Social Science Education, 2023
Purpose: The aim of this article is to contribute new knowledge about critical thinking in social studies and conspiracy beliefs in Norwegian schools. We explore Norwegian high school pupils' self-reported learning about critical thinking in social studies and their attitudes toward conspiracy theories. Design/methodology/approach: The survey…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, COVID-19, Pandemics, Misconceptions
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Alina-Mogos, Andreea; Grap, Teodora-Elena; Sandru, Teodora-Felicia – Comunicar: Media Education Research Journal, 2022
The news site ro.sputnik.md is the Romanian language version of the Sputnik news website platform, owned by the Russian government, one of the main channels used by the Kremlin to disseminate mis- and disinformation across Russian borders. The current research aims to identify the frames associated with anti-COVID-19 vaccines, and the news values…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, News Media, Misconceptions, Information Dissemination
Challenger, Douglas F. – New England Journal of Higher Education, 2021
According to Douglas Challenger, American democracy just survived a near-death experience during the slow-motion coup that was the four years of Donald Trump's presidency. It culminated in his rejecting his electoral loss and pressuring officials and political allies to back his claims that the election was fraudulent and, at the end, inciting his…
Descriptors: Democracy, Citizenship Education, Presidents, Citizen Participation
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Mutsvairo, Bruce; Bebawi, Saba – Journalism and Mass Communication Educator, 2019
From diplomatic spats between Qatar and Saudi Arabia to ubiquitous deceptive "news" updates purportedly sent by the Eritrean government urging all men to marry two wives or risk imprisonment, the future of fact-based reporting appears uncertain as mass media recipients world over become accustomed to consuming "fake news."…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Media, News Reporting, Deception
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Fedorov, Alexander; Levitskaya, Anastasia; Gorbatkova, Olga; Mamadaliev, Anvar – European Journal of Contemporary Education, 2018
Films of the "perestroika" period (1986-1991) related to school/university theme showed that: - the educational / upbringing process has lost the previous strict storylines and in many respects has lost its communist landmarks;--both school and university have acute problem areas (crisis, disappointment and fatigue, professional…
Descriptors: Films, Social Change, Social Systems, Fatigue (Biology)
Gilley, Brian Joseph; Keesee, Marguerite – American Indian and Alaska Native Mental Health Research: The Journal of the National Center, 2007
This article presents the results of a pilot study on the use of conspiracy beliefs by American Indian (AI) men who have sex with men and their peers to explain the origins of HIV/AIDS. We found that one-third (N = 15) of the individuals surveyed believed that HIV/AIDS was intentionally created by "Whites, White Christians, or the Federal…
Descriptors: Whites, Etiology, Public Health, Males
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Gillborn, David – Educational Review, 2008
Adopting an approach shaped by critical race theory (CRT) the paper proposes a radical analysis of the nature of race inequality in the English educational system. Focusing on the relative achievements of White school leavers and their Black (African Caribbean) peers, it is argued that long standing Black/White inequalities have been obscured by a…
Descriptors: Free Schools, Academic Achievement, Minority Groups, Critical Theory
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Dade County Public Schools, Miami, FL. – 1971
This course for use in secondary schools is a continuation of the Catilanarian Conspiracy and Cicero's "Third Oration Against Catiline," including a review of grammar and syntax. Performance objectives concern the history of Rome prior to Catiline and Cicero, Roman government, Ciceronian oration, Cicero's literary style, vocabulary and…
Descriptors: Classical Languages, Cultural Education, Educational Objectives, History
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Cogan, John J.; Weber, Ronald E. – Social Education, 1983
Because of revisions made in the content of history textbooks, Japan has been accused of attempting to rewrite history as part of a larger conspiracy to brainwash students and to rearm the nation. Discussed are the legal authority of the national government to screen and approve textbooks and international reactions. (RM)
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Educational History, Elementary Secondary Education, Federal Government
Schwartzman, Roy – 1988
A mythic interpretive framework can explain how the use of an uncontested term--a word which "seems to invite a contest, but which apparently is not so regarded in its own context"--is legitimated and perpetuated. By examining John C. Calhoun's nullification rhetoric as a case study of political myth (specifically his "Disquisition…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Constitutional History, Discourse Analysis, Mythology
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Ritchie, Donald A. – Journal of Government Information, 2004
Sealed for 50 years, the transcripts of the executive session hearings conducted by Senator Joseph R. McCarthy, as chairman of the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations in 1953 and 1954, were recently opened for research. The Senate Historical Office edited the transcripts for publication by the Government Printing Office and on the…
Descriptors: Government Publications, Records (Forms), Investigations, Hearings
Olson, Kristin – 1986
Exposure to asbestos in the air poses serious health threats, particularly to children. The use of asbestos in schools after World War II may have exposed millions of persons before regulations controlling asbestos use began appearing in the 1970s. Federal efforts to reduce exposure to asbestos have included passage of the Asbestos School Hazard…
Descriptors: Asbestos, Court Litigation, Federal Programs, Federal Regulation
Nufrio, Ronald M. – 1988
The 1865 conspiracy to assassinate Abraham Lincoln also included plans to assassinate other government officials on that same April evening. The actor, John Wilkes Booth, succeeded in killing Lincoln, but his fellow conspirators bungled their attempts to kill William Seward, Andrew Johnson, Ulysses S. Grant, and possibly Edwin Stanton. In…
Descriptors: Assignments, Civil War (United States), Instructional Materials, Investigations
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