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Triple A Learning IB Blogs

May 3, 2012

dangerous knowledge?

Research just published on bird flu (avian H5H1 influenza virus) has created a controversy to catch the attention of any teacher of TOK.  Should the findings of science be censored for the public good, and, if so, who decides and according to what criteria?  The US National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity (NSABB) recommended last December that two papers on the topic of transmission of this flu virus between lab ferrets should be censored before being published on the grounds that “strains could be used by bioterrorists” and that “untrammelled proliferation of the work would raise the risk of an accidental release from a lab.”  Counter-arguments, however, have prevailed:  that it is extremely difficult to restrict access to the research, and that close surveillance of the work would be beneficial.  Have a look at the article published online yesterday in Nature:  “Mutant-flu paper published.”

Dr. Philip Campbell, Editor-in-Chief of Nature, is quoted in an article from the BBC expressing deep concern about the very idea of censoring research and publication. “”If we are to go down the censorship route, how do you decide which researchers should get the sensitive information? And how can you realistically ensure that once it is in a university environment that it won’t go further?””

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December 12, 2010

human rights and knowledge: a Nobel Prize and WikiLeaks

“Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.” Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights

On this year’s United Nations Human Rights Day (December 10), Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon dedicated the observance to defenders of human rights:

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November 5, 2010

“Media misreading midterms”: narratives in the media

Filed under: TOK meets global citizenship — Tags: , , , , — Eileen Dombrowski @ 3:50 am

What interpretation unites scattered facts into a “story” to be told in the media?  The media watch organization Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR) presents and supports an argument that the American media have shared a narrative constructed with highly selected facts:  “Media Misreading Midterms: As usual, press urge a move to the right”.  The particular example may not resonate with all of us in that it is centred specifically on the American press.  Yet it does bring up points relevant also to the press of other countries, and concludes with a quotation that I, personally, find relevant to a lot of the general news that I follow: “Until we get better media, we will not get better politics.”

Any teacher dealing with thinking critically about information presented in the media might find interesting some of the general analysis available on FAIR’s website, including an broad introduction entitled “What’s wrong with the news?”

Eileen Dombrowski

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November 3, 2010

tabloid journalism and the challenge to knowledge

“public discourse has dissolved into a puerile and polarized junkfest”  Tabloid journalism, tabloid society

This review by Lawrence Martin of an article by media critic Marvin Kitman is worth reading.  In my mind, the most important thing we can teach our students is to be open, learn, think critically, and then make good decisions — decisions that are informed and ethical.  This goal is ambitious, yes, but attainable.  In my mind, the greatest barrier to our teaching and their learning is media control.  This isn’t new.  For many years, for instance, Noam Chomsky has been bringing to our attention the ownership of media and its effect on what information reaches the public, and how it is cast.  The corporate funding of disinformation campaigns and their open play in the media has become one of the most urgent issues of knowledge of our era.  Is teaching students awareness and skills to evaluate the media too political now to tackle in class?

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August 14, 2010

“Merchants of Doubt”: disinformation and knowledge

I’m really preoccupied with this knowledge issue this summer: how control of information influences knowledge…and therefore the basis we have for informed and responsible choices as individuals and as societies.  I’ve recently listened to a podcast recorded in June and want to pass it on to you as a “must-listen”.

It deals with a discovery.  Researching independently, Naomi Oreskes and Eric Conway made the same curious observation: that testimony casting doubt on acid rain, the negative impact of tobacco, and global warming seemed to come from the same sources.  What they had discovered was the impact of think-tanks such as the Marshall Institute, funded to discredit any science whose conclusions undermined the business interests of tobacco manufacturers and oil companies, to mention two — and in the process science itself.  The result was their recent book, How a Handful of Scientists Obscured the Truth on Issues from Tobacco Smoke to Global Warming.

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August 1, 2010

Is that an expert — or an advertisement?

Misrepresentations and masquerades — these ideas have preoccupied me this summer.  Seeing through them to truthful versions feels as if it’s growing more and more onerous.  Is it really MY responsibility to figure out whether an “expert” holding forth in the media is actually in the employ of a corporation or PR firm?  Much as I accept (and sometimes go on about) personal responsibility for filtering information critically, at the moment I feel quite bad tempered over the degree to which ordinary people like myself have to be on guard the whole time against being conned on some of the most important social and environmental issues of our day.

In an article entitled “Punditry for sale” in July’s Le Monde Diplomatique, Sebastian Jones pulls together information on “covert corporate influence peddling” on cable TV networks and the impact on public opinion: “No single appearance can damage legislation and reform, yet there is a cumulative effect from hundreds of appearances by dozens of lobbyists and influence peddlers that helps to drive press coverage and public opinion.”

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