Methodology
Definitions
Denial Vs. Doubt
True or False?
Fun Facts (not very fun though)
100

The interview sample included how many people?

21

100

The disbelieve or doubt of the mainstream scientific view of global climate change or, in some cases, discount that view entirely

Climate Skepticism

100

The path of deniers follows a major shift in _____ and ______ of cognitive dissonance.

identity and resolution

100

Framing a narrative in a particular way may affect the perceptions of those who encounter it. 

TRUE

100

__ % of liberal democrats accept climate science in contrast to only __ % of conservative republicans.

86% to 27%

200

How many of the participants were men, women, and non-binary?

13 men, 7 women, 1 non-binary

200

People who claim to have changed their minds about climate change are called...

Former Skeptics

200

The journey for doubters involves a progressive acceptance of new information through engagement with _________ and __________.

respected authorities and personal observations

200

The tendency for people to seek out or accept information that aligns with their existing views and reject that which challenges them is known as identity conflict.

FALSE (confirmation bias)

200

__ percent of people in Idaho do not believe in anthropogenic

climate change vs. __ percent in the nation

36 vs. 30

300

How many were interviewed?

12

300

How one’s group membership (i.e., race, political party, school community, etc.) shapes one’s sense of self is known as ______ Theory. 

Social Identity 


300

Some of the participants who were once deniers had an outcome of (1) changing _______, (2) having________, and (3) having _________.

(1) changing peer groups because of a significant move and 

(2) having the opportunity to learn about science in a space in which doing so was socially supported or, for some, 

(3) having religious ideas challenged by the emergence of a new, conflicting
identity— their sexuality.

300

In this piece, we contend that climate change skepticism is a spectrum ranging from outright denial of climate science to a more wary doubting of the veracity of climate change, with various points in between.

TRUE

300

Participants were primed to consider new ideas through a combination of moving to a new location, encountering new peer groups, and taking college courses in which the consideration of new ideas became a ___________.

cultural norm

400

How many were doubters? How many became believers?

6
400

Holding two identities in conflict leads to a need to reconcile the resulting _______. 

Cognitive dissonance

400

Not all skepticism is the same and one's starting point may ________________.

alter the trajectory through which one changes their mind about climate change

400

The influence of information is unlimited to the degree to which a news source is viewed as respected. 

FALSE (limited)

400

Idaho hosts an economic history marked

by settler colonialism, resource extraction, and contemporary con-

flicts between _____, ______, and _______.

environmentalists, loggers, ranchers

500

How many of the interviewers changed views from conservative to liberal?

5

500

The process wherein people become seen as representative of the groups to which they are assigned rather than as individuals is called _____.


Depersonalization

500

They find that news media exacerbates ____________ – strengthening Republican denial of the phenomenon and Democratic acceptance.

existing political divides

500

According to the article, media-based information about climate change does not at all have to be paired with personal experience or exposure to climate-related weather anomalies to resonate with skeptics. 

FALSE (may need to be paired with)

500

Doubters c ame to accept climate science through ___ ____ and conversation with those they _____ and ________

Personal relations; admired and respected

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