https://guides.temple.edu/fakenews
For the purpose of this guide, "fake news" is defined as “ purposefully crafted, sensational, emotionally charged, misleading or totally fabricated information that mimics the form of mainstream news ” (Zimdars & McLeod, 2020).
https://www.tuj.ac.jp/sites/japan/files/AvoidingPlagiarismWhenUsingSources.pdf
When the War on Drugs began, most Americans didn’t even think that drugs were an important problem, but racist media campaigns that depicted “black criminality” led Americans to believe that drugs were one of the most destructive things in the country. (Gay 6) This is plagiarism.
https://guides.temple.edu/fakenews/teaching
How to identify (and avoid) false information.
https://owlsports.com/
1 WSOC October 2, 2025 Owls Drop Close One to North Texas at Home FH October 2, 2025 Temple Heads to Quinnipiac for BIG EAST Clash Friday Watch Live Stats
https://law.temple.edu/contact/rachel-rebouche/
Dean Rebouché has served as a co-investigator on two grant-funded research projects related to reproductive health, one housed at the Emory University Rollins School of Public Health and another funded by the World Health Organization.
https://www.tuj.ac.jp/sites/japan/files/20191212_mainichi_tokyo.pdf
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https://community.mis.temple.edu/mis5208sp18/files/2018/01/Auditors%E2%80%99-Responsibility-for-Fraud-Detection.-1.pdf
SAS no. 99 requires auditors to assess fraud risks, but one of the problems practitioners have had with the previous standard fraud is that they mistakenly believed “assessment” to mean they should describe the risk as high, medium or low.
https://guides.temple.edu/fakenews/bias
This is "the tendency to search for or interpret information in a way that confirms one’s preconceptions" (Bear, 2016). When information aligns with our own opinions or experiences, we're more likely to interact with it. Learn more about confirmation bias in the video below.
https://law.temple.edu/aer/publication/trial-advocacy-basics-3rd-edition-nita/
This prohibition is similar to the one against assuming facts not in evidence. For example, if the witness has testified that they were driving “about forty miles an hour,” the question “As you were speeding down the road, what did you see?” misstates the witness’s testimony.
https://news.temple.edu/nutshell/2023-03-20/what-do-you-meme-you-can-get-sued-social-post
Not only are memes massively popular (Instagram reported in 2020 that its users share more than one million memes daily), but they’ve also evolved into a booming business.