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Lesson 4: Critically Consuming Statistics, Frames, Media and Claimsmaking Social Problems Robert Wonser 1
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2 Damned Lies and Statistics Statistical Benchmarks: U.S. population +/- 310 million About 4 million babies born every year About 2.4 million die every year 1 in 4 from heart disease (1,206,374 deaths in 2004), cancer too Traffic accidents: 43,000 people (about 1 or 2%), breast cancer: 40,000, homicide: 17k, suicide 32k
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3 In general, the worse things are, the less common they are As a general rule, advocates prefer to define social problems as broadly as possible: First, advocates claim they are drawing attention to the issue Second, they allow advocates to count more cases
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Frames Research suggests that a small number of frames (or maybe just one) on any particular issue become dominant in public discourse while others are ignored Frame describes how the public, media, activists, politicians, and anyone else portray social problems. They provide a way to make sense of what we experience
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What Framing Techniques are being used? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pyZoNs0kAkA 5
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Calmismakers frame issues They do so in ways that reflect their beliefs about the issues but also that get people ’ s attention and compassion (or derision). Media choose to frame issues in ways that attract the largest audience possible. Media is in the business of using social problems to entertain their audience rather than educating them
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Framing Techniques Piggybacking Domain expansion Constructing worthy victims Horrifying examples
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What makes some claims more successful than others? Read the article on looksismlooksism Is this successful? Why or why not? How would you suggest improving it?
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