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Facts/Opinions and Bias. How did the adverse effects of DDT affect people's opinions in the developed world? Experts opinion was that DDT was extremely harmful to the environment 1970 – most countries banned DDT
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Facts/Opinions and Bias How did the adverse effects of DDT affect people's opinions in the developed world? • Experts opinion was that DDT was extremely harmful to the environment • 1970 – most countries banned DDT • Opinions based on the facts resulted in people’s behaviour change and DDT was no longer used. Why is it different in many parts of the developing world? • However, developing countries still produce and use DDT • Low cost and high degree of effectiveness against Malaria Example: • 1996 spraying of DDT was stopped in South Africa and the cases of Malaria increased by 150 per cent. • When spraying resumed cases of Malaria decreased dramatically.
1.a. What is the difference between facts and opinions?Give an example of each, other than what is mentioned in the text. Opinions: the beliefs that people hold, and the judgments they make about events. Opinions are subjective because they form as a result of one’s personal outlook on life. Facts: Knowledge that is certain and incontestable, observations, or personal experience. Facts are objective.
1.c. Provide two other examples of people continuing to behave in a certain manner despite knowing the negative implications of their actions. • Over fishing most of the world’s oceans • Governments not providing adequate funding for education • Driving vehicles that consume large quantities of fossil fuel • Cutting more trees than are planted • Smoking when you know it causes cancer • Not funding urban transit systems
2. What is bias? • Bias is the presentation of an issue from a single point of view. How does bias usually show up? • Including facts that only support your point of view • Use of language (biased words) especially the choice of verbs and adjectives • Selecting statistics that only support your point of view and neglecting others • Selection of Images/maps to support your issue
Mercator Projection • Equatorial regions are smaller • Polar regions are larger
Robinson Projection Shape of the countries in the polar regions are badly distorted. Used by national geographic 1988 – 1998.
Mercator Projection - bias • Projection was used to emphasize the size of the British empire during the 19th century, by extension its power and influence around the world. • Countries in the equatorial region objected because they felt it diminished their importance
Three Gorges: Different Perspectives Question 1 • Both articles should be reliable • One is official government • Other respected environmental group • Each argument is skewed
Question 2 • Both present arguments that appear valid and persuasive • Can both sides be right? • Yes. Because both are using facts and opinions to support their point of view • People are often swayed not by facts, but by the manner in which facts are presented.
Question 3 • Examples of based language: Pro: Chinese Government • “World’s largest” – is used three times and “world’s most famous” is used once • …”charming” scenery will be left untouched Con: (Probe International) • “catastrophic” flooding during construction • Corruption scandals “plagued” during the project • …as cheaper power sources become available that “lure” away customers