COM 325 - Exploring Fake News Instructor
Bailey
“Fake news” has long been with us. But in recent years, it has become a staple in our political discourse and shapes how many Americans view politics and their fellow human beings. It even led to a North Carolina man driving to Washington, D.C. to shoot up a pizza parlor because he had been convinced the restaurant was home to a supposed child sex ring led by Hillary Clinton - as well as a literal insurrection attempt on our Capitol building. Not every negative effect of fake news is that dramatic, but the less dramatic forms have had an even more profound effect on personal relationships of all sorts. In this course, students will be taught how to spot fake news, counter it, as well as inoculate themselves by learning how to produce real, ethical news.
Satisfies Communication Studies major and minor requirement
Satisfies Literary Studies, Creative Writing, and Rhetoric requirement
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