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Some channels of shared knowledge TOK
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Internet Find two articles from the internet: one that you believe and one that you don’t. Give your reasons. What criteria would you use for distinguishing generally trustworthy websites from generally untrustworthy ones?
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Internet Some possible problems with the internet – Lack of quality control – Superficiality – Filter bubbles: situations in which we surround ourselves with information that confirms our pre-existing knowledge
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Cultural tradition How would you characterise your own cultural identity? According to research familiarity breeds fondness – How can this be seen in your cultural identity?
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Cultural tradition Should we always try to preserve our cultural tradition? – What pros and cons lie in preserving our cultural traditions?
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Cultural tradition Some possible problems with cultural traditions – Tradition can narrow peoples freedom – Tradition can distort truth in the form of false belief systems – Tradition can prevent progress and lead to stagnation
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School Group work: design your ideal education programme with complete curriculum for students aged 15 to 19
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School How does your ideal school compare to the IB programme and it’s curriculum?
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School Some possible problems with education – Danger of indoctrination – Spurious balance: giving equal weight to both sides of alleged controversy when the evidence strongly suggests that one side is wrong
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Experts When should we trust experts? – Credentials? – Evidence? – Corroboration? – Track Record? – Neutrality?
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Experts Richard Feynman (1918–1988): – ’I believe that a scientist looking at non-scientific problem is just as dumb as the next guy’
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The news media Compare and contrast the way two or three different newspapers cover a major news story How easy is it to distinguish between fact and opinion in order to establish the truth?
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The news media Some possible problems with the news media – (1) Agenda setting: which stories are selected and considered important? – (2) Framing: how the selected stories are treated and presented?
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The news media Sensationalism bias: tendency to focus on sensational news stories Bad news bias: tendency to focus on bad news rather than good news National bias: tendency to view global events through national interest
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Summary And once again! – Who should you trust? – What criteria do we have for distinguishing more and less reliable sources?
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CARS checklist
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Picture Sources http://www.mymerhaba.com/Internet-in- Turkey-4592.html http://click-accenture.com/monetising-big- data-information-age/#.VeQDbLSPftA https://studentaffairscollective.org/meninsa- all-identities-come-with-privilege/
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Picture Sources https://studentaffairscollective.org/meninsa- all-identities-come-with-privilege/ http://images-pictures.org/school-building- clip-art-photo-and-pictures.html http://www.yis.ac.jp/page.cfm?p=763 http://worldofdtcmarketing.com/time-to- eliminate-fair-balance-on-dtc-ads/fda/
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Picture Sources http://the-uptimizers.be/fr/ask-an-expert- workshops/ http://earthsky.org/human-world/earthsky- 22-richard-feynman-is-still-awesome http://smileandmobile.com/2015/08/23/ http://ourtowntustin.com/2015/05/20/on- the-agenda-of-the-not-so-special-tustin-city- council-meeting-may-20-2015/
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Picture Sources http://dougfunniesjournal.tumblr.com/post/3 693309482/episode-21-part-2-dougs-big- news https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/2014082513 5605-169269010-building-executive-trust-in- three-easy-steps van de Lagemaat, Richard: Theory of Knowledge for the IB Diploma, Second edition, Cambridge University Press 2015, page 69
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