Crash Course
2 Crash 2 Course
Crash Course: Tokyo Drift
The Crash Course
100

What is the term?

Using an expert or celebrity (e.g., a doctor endorsing a medicine).

Authority

100

What is confirmation bias?

The tendency to seek out information that confirms what we already believe, while ignoring information that contradicts those beliefs.

100

What is the term?

flawed arguments that sound persuasive but lack logical support

Fallacies

100

What is the term?

Friendly or funny people make you more open to the message (e.g., humorous commercials).



Likability

200

What is one action you can take to more fairly evaluate new information?

“I can check multiple sources before deciding something is true”



200

What is a possible negative consequence of only consuming like-minded news or content?

It can lead to resistance  to new or contradictory information.

200

Why might people prefer “what confirms their beliefs” rather than exploring opposing viewpoints?

Because it makes us feel more secure or validated in our beliefs.

200

Explain this statement: “Our brain chooses to see things that appeal to us more readily than things that challenge us.”

Our brains are wired to favor familiar or agreeable information. Challenging ideas take more effort to process, so we often avoid them.

300

What is the danger of only consuming media that aligns with our beliefs?

We can become misinformed, live in an echo chamber, and become less understanding of other perspectives.

300

How can someone guard against confirmation bias when researching or learning something new?

By seeking out diverse sources, questioning assumptions, and actively looking at opposing viewpoints.

300

What is information satisficing?

It’s when we settle for the first piece of information that seems “good enough” instead of verifying accuracy.

300

What is the term: Paid messages intended to influence people in a certain way.



Advertising

400

Name the term: Crafting a public image or message about a person, company, or product, often through media channels.



Public Relations or (PR)

400

What is the term: Information, often biased or misleading, used to promote a point of view.



Propaganda

400

What is Maslow’s hierarchy of needs?

A pyramid of human needs, starting from basic survival (food, safety) to higher-level needs (belonging, esteem).

400

What is the term:  Repeating slogans or visuals (e.g., “I’m lovin’ it”).

Repetition

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