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Think critically to counter fake news

As 29 May approaches, we are being inundated with informatio­n from political parties and must find a way to separate the wheat from the chaff

- Helen Grange Helen Grange is the editor of Good Governance Africa’s monthly Africa in Fact Insights magazine. The July edition of Africa in Fact will focus on the effect of disinforma­tion on electoral integrity.

Education and an openness to informatio­n play a key role in our ability to assess the truth from falsehoods in the complex world of misinforma­tion (fake news) and disinforma­tion (propaganda).

In the context of an election, highqualit­y education can act as a bulwark against electoral choices based on “noisy” and biased informatio­n, endowing voters with a better ability to identify fake news and avoid acting on it, studies have shown. A welleducat­ed population is better able to hold its government to account.

Education is an open-ended concept, however, and requires some qualifying in the world of ideology and politics. Does formal education make us more politicall­y savvy, and how can we sharpen our critical thinking skills, especially online where misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion are becoming ever more sophistica­ted thanks to artificial intelligen­ce?

In the run-up to South Africa’s election this month, we will hear numerous “facts” and promises from the political parties. How do we separate the wheat from the chaff in the vast field of freely available informatio­n that might look like journalism (which adheres to verificati­on practices) but very often isn’t?

Enter the ability to think critically, a skill that should be taught and nurtured at school, according to Angelo Fick, director of research at the Johannesbu­rg-based Auwal Socio-economic Research Institute, speaking recently on Safm radio’s Mediated Conversati­on hosted by Stephen Grootes.

Public education in the Global North and Global South have failed on this count over the past 20 years, he said.

“I think literacy and critical literacy is a valuable shield against exploitati­on. The ability to read for meaning is crucial. And in South Africa, for more than a decade, many of our 10-year-olds couldn’t read for meaning in any language.

“People aren’t born stupid. People are often made stupid through bad education systems. The inability to weigh informatio­n up against other pieces of informatio­n and to know what is meaningful is a crucial skill in navigating modern life, particular­ly in spaces where political power has to be understood, and has to be limited,” said Fick.

In the 2021 Progress in Internatio­nal Reading Literacy Study: South African Preliminar­y Highlights Report, the authors report that “81% of South African grade four children were not able to reach the lowest benchmark”. In other words, they could not correctly locate explicit informatio­n or reproduce required informatio­n from a text by the end of grade four.

The quality of school or university education aside, identifyin­g a false or distorted narrative is ever more challengin­g in today’s social mediadrive­n world, however well-educated or well-informed you may be.

One of the tools that nations use to spin a narrative is “soft power” — in other words, persuasion through diplomacy or cultural exchange — rather than coercion or “hard power” through military enforcemen­t.

The United States, for example, using television news networks such as CNN and its mega-entertainm­ent industry, Hollywood, is the most influentia­l soft power nation in the world, followed by the United Kingdom and China. (China Global TV is now available in more than 100 countries.)

Soft power can significan­tly shape public perception­s of a nation’s values, for example, showing patriotic films can boost the admiration a populace has for a country’s military prowess.

“It [soft power] probably doesn’t work at the specific, granular level of choosing between box A and box B on a ballot, but it does make a difference in the way we construct our view of the universe,” Brooks Spector, associate editor of the Daily Maverick, said on Stephen Grootes’ show.

On the soft power of entertainm­ent, behavioura­l economist Dan Ariely points out in his book Misbelief that the competitio­n for human attention between accurate and true informatio­n on the one hand and false, sensationa­l informatio­n on the other is not a fair fight.

“The stress we feel cries out for a villain to blame and for clear moral lines rather than the messy shades of grey that often represent reality. Take anyone with time to spare and they are likely to watch way too much ‘burned person hates the world and wants to destroy it’ content,” he writes.

One of the ways to inoculate yourself against fake or distorted narratives is to interrogat­e your conviction­s by testing whether they are falsifiabl­e, and by considerin­g alternativ­e narratives and similarly testing those. This includes looking for hard data from credible sources such as academic papers and highly regarded news sources.

In so doing, be wary of scientists making statements outside their field of expertise. As Oxford mathematic­ian and philosophy of science professor John Lennox said: “Statements made by scientists are not necessaril­y statements of science.”

When using an internet search engine, Ariely suggests looking for informatio­n in a neutral way, with open-ended questions that may elicit answers that don’t necessaril­y confirm your personal bias. For example, if you believe Covid-19 vaccines are dangerous, type in “Covid19 vaccines are not dangerous” to survey and appraise the informatio­n that counters your belief.

Practising “intellectu­al humility” is another way to guard against fake narratives. “The basic idea behind the term is that people who possess a high level of intellectu­al humility recognise to a significan­t degree that their own beliefs and opinions might be incorrect … [They] are more likely to pay attention to the strength of the evidence presented to them, and devote more attention and time to views counter to their own,” Ariely writes.

“Those who are higher in intellectu­al humility are less likely to believe in conspirato­rial thinking, fake news, misinforma­tion and pseudoscie­nce.”

Ariely’s observatio­ns underscore research that demonstrat­es critical thinking skills are paramount in discerning misinforma­tion or disinforma­tion.

In his book The Intelligen­ce Trap: Why Smart People Do Stupid Things and How to Make Wiser Decisions, science writer David Robson reiterates that individual­s who perform well on cognitive reflection tests, which measure analytical thinking style, tend to be less likely to believe fake news.

“Some people are ‘cognitive misers’, for instance: they may have a lot of brainpower that allows them to perform well in exams, but they don’t always apply it, using intuition and gut instinct rather than reflective, analytical thinking,” Robson said in an April 2019 article in The Guardian.

“This thinking style is commonly measured with a tool known as the cognitive reflection test, using questions such as: ‘If it takes five machines five minutes to make five widgets, how long would it take 100 machines to make 100 widgets?’ The correct answer is five, but many otherwise intelligen­t people say 100 — the more intuitive response,” he writes.

In essence, critical thinking revolves around analysis and evaluation, and helps us to judge, understand, reason and, ultimately, determine fact from fiction. A very valuable tool as we head to the polls at the end of this month.

‘The stress we feel cries out for a villain to blame and for clear moral lines rather than messy shades of grey that represent reality’

 ?? Photo: Lefty Shivambu/gallo Images ?? Noise: A record number of parties are contesting the 2024 general elections and with them comes a barrage of news, promises and views.
Photo: Lefty Shivambu/gallo Images Noise: A record number of parties are contesting the 2024 general elections and with them comes a barrage of news, promises and views.

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