| One of the important parts of critical thinking is the awareness that no one is perfectly critical and thinking logically all the time. Anyone can make errors in the process of thinking– unconscious errors that lead to misinterpretation of information that is around us. The other side of the coin is logical errors – incomplete, misleading or false statements which fail to pass critical and logical assessments. What does this mean in practice? It means that any information should be treated with healthy scepticism:
|
![]() |

What is a conspiracy theory?

The information bubble

Why do we believe in conspiracy theories?

Fact checking

What is critical thinking?

How to escape the rabbit hole?
Activity description
5 min.
2. The trainer, without the others seeing, divides them into "S" (Science) and "PS" (Pseudoscience) groups
5 min.
3. The "S" groups create news based on scientific research, while the "PS" groups create news based on pseudoscience.
30 min.
4. Each group role-plays their news (similar to news announcers on TV or radio), and the other participants, using various questions, try to determine whether it is based on research or pseudoscience. They must justify their answers.
40 min.

