Toolkits
Bias
Sources
Presentations
World News
100

True or False: Photographs/images can express ideas or emotions that the text alone does not convey (전달하다).

What is true. 

100

A point of view based on pre-existing (기존의) beliefs (믿음) held by the author.

What is bias?
100

-What people say and write

-Photographs and videos

-Maps

-Statistics and Data

What is primary source?

100

True or False: It's okay to ignore (무시하다) audience questions if you're unsure of the answer.

What is false?

100

The main reason why countries are scrambling (쟁탈) for the oceans. 

What is to take ownership of ocean resources? 

200

Name the clue that does not belong when identifying the author's perspective: Tone, Background, My Opinion, Purpose. 

What is My Opinion? 

200

A truth that is known by actual (실제) experience or observation (관찰).

What is Fact?

200

The more reliable source:

Textbook or Newspaper

What is, "it depends on the newspaper publisher, author and the topic"?

200

Something that doesn't belong when presenting about current events: clear speaking, how many cookies eaten, eye contact, confidence, body language, and number of articles read. 

What is how many cookies eaten and the number of articles read? 

200

Research shows that it can take __ minutes to refocus after using a phone.  

What is 20 minutes? 

300

The war in the Middle East caused gas prices to increase in South Korea. This is how it impacted the local community.

What is economy?

300

The author uses very negative or positive words.

What is word?

What is word choice? 

300

-Biographies (전기)

-Reviews

-Textbooks

-Documentaries

What is secondary source?

300

Name at least 3 different types of article categories.

What is education, sports, politics, geopolitics, science, space, arts, culture, economy, entertainment, etc.?

300

The region that jailed 45 democracy activists for allegedly (주장한 바에 의하면) planning to overthrow (정복) the government under CNS law. 

What is Hong Kong? 

400

The skill of understanding different opinions and making fair decisions about right and wrong.
a) What is critical thinking? 

b) What is empathy? 

c) What is ethical judgement? 

What is C, ethical judgement? 

400

The author leaves out everything that might argue against his or her ideas.

What is completeness?

400

Name one clue that a source might not be credible (trustworthy). 

What is lack of an author, outdated information, or no citations?

400

This is how you keep your audience engaged and involved in the presentation.

What is ask questions? 

400

According to the Newsweek article, published in October 2024, these are the top 4 countries that manufacture nuclear warheads. 

What is Russia, U.S., China and France? 

500

Name at least two criteria for making an ethical judgment.

What is 

-impact on others 

-conflicting values

-public concern

500

It does not belong in the "Recognizing BIAS Checklist":

Author, Topic, Words, Ideas, Completeness, Tone, Date.

What is Topic and Date. 

500

Name 4 information you include in a citation. 

What is author's name, article title, website title, publisher, date published, date visited, and the URL.

500

Name 4 information you include when presenting about current events.

what is citation, main idea, cause-effect, problem-solution, description, compare-contrast, chronological order, perspectives, and analysis (personal/local/global impact, ethical judgement, patters/trends, bias)?

500

What I should focus on as a student when learning about world conflicts, and how I should manage my feelings while understanding these events. 

What is, as a student, my focus should be on staying engaged with my responsibilities and trusting the guidance of adults around me. While it's important to understand world conflicts, I should not stress about them, as conflicts are ongoing and part of the broader world situation.