Faith & fake news : a guide to consuming information wisely / Rachel I. Wightman.
Material type: TextPublisher: Grand Rapids, Michigan : William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2023Description: viii, 184 pages : illustrations ; 21 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780802882455
- 0802882455
- Faith and fake news [Cover title]
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Materials specified | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Adult Book | Main Library | NonFiction | 302.3028 W658 | Available | 33111011278054 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
Share if you love Jesus. Scroll past if you follow the devil.
Most Christians have encountered phony posts on our feeds meant to rile us up. But not everything we see on social media is so obviously absurd. As online spaces increase in importance, we urgently need to consider how to love our neighbors on the internet--and this includes sharing the truth.
Rachel I. Wightman has seen this problem firsthand as a librarian with over a decade of experience instructing students in information literacy. In Faith and Fake News , she shares her expertise with average Christians. This timely and essential guide explains the information landscape and its tendency toward thought bubbles, discusses techniques for fact-checking and evaluating sources, and offers suggestions on ways to engage with our neighbors online while bearing witness to Christ and the truth.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 181-182) and index.
Part 1. The Information Landscape -- 1. Algorithms and Filter Bubbles -- 2. The Wide-Open Information Landscape -- 3. A World of Fake News -- Part 2. Evaluating Information -- 4. Noticing Our Emotions -- 5. Learning to Evaluate -- Part 3. Deciding What to Do -- 6. Purposefully Seeking Out New Perspectives -- 7. Loving Our Neighbors.
"A guide for Christians about evaluating news sources and participating charitably in online communities"-- Provided by publisher.
"Share if you love Jesus. Scroll past if you follow the devil. Most Christians have seen something asinine like this on Facebook and rightly dismissed it. But not every post on social media is so obviously absurd. As online spaces increase in importance, it is urgent that we as Christians consider how to love our neighbors on the internet-and this includes sharing the truth.Rachel I. Wightman has seen this problem firsthand as a librarian with over a decade of experience instructing students in information literacy. In Faith and Fake News, she shares her expertise with average Christians. This timely and essential guide explains the information landscape and its tendency toward thought bubbles, discusses techniques for fact-checking and evaluating sources, and offers suggestions on ways to engage with our neighbors online while bearing witness to Christ and the truth"-- Provided by publisher.