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'Calling Bullshit' makes an impact at schools across the country

Wednesday, October 4, 2017

When Jevin West and quietly rolled out in January, they hoped a few of their ideas would find their way into classrooms. At best, maybe the University of Washington would let them teach a class.

鈥淲e would have been happy if a couple of our colleagues and friends would have said, 鈥楥ool idea, we should pass that along,鈥 said West, an assistant professor at the Information School. 鈥淲e would have never guessed that it would get this kind of a response.鈥

They certainly got a reaction. The website went viral; their spring class filled up in one minute; dozens of local and national media outlets covered the story; the duo signed a book deal; and their curriculum spread to colleges and high schools across the country. Calling Bullshit became a force of nature, and West and Bergstrom were at the center of the storm.

鈥淚t鈥檚 exciting to see this movement around data reasoning building on the class,鈥 West said. 鈥淚t, for me, encapsulates what we do at an iSchool. It involves data processes, analytics, visualization, and design.鈥

The provocative title undoubtedly helped raise Calling Bullshit鈥檚 profile. It conveys people鈥檚 frustration with a growing set of problems in the age of social media: the spread of misinformation and disinformation, the rise of 鈥渇ake news,鈥 the manipulation of data to create misleading graphics, the misuse of science to draw conclusions that aren鈥檛 supported by facts.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e fed with so much BS in all aspects of their lives,鈥 West said. 鈥淓very time in history, everyone says there鈥檚 more bullshit than in prior times, but I think now you could make an argument there really is, and I think people are sick and tired of it.鈥

West and Bergstrom, a professor in the UW Biology department, wanted to teach students how to think critically about the data that鈥檚 presented as evidence in the social and natural sciences. They designed their curriculum to show students not only how to identify falsehoods, but how to effectively and constructively call attention to them.

An evolutionary biologist, Bergstrom said his interest stems from problems he sees in how scientists convey their findings to one another and to the public.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 important for scientists to communicate with each other through rigorous and generally accessible work rather than through kind of overhyped press releases,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 also think it鈥檚 ethically imperative that we communicate with the public about what we鈥檙e doing accurately and honestly so people can understand what science is about, rather than presenting science in a misleading light that casts us as 鈥榙iscovering heroes.鈥欌

Jevin West lectures on Calling Bullshit.
Jevin West speaks to the class during the first lecture of the spring Calling Bullshit class at the UW. (Photo courtesy of Columns magazine)

Instant reaction

The morning after they put up their website, West and Bergstrom knew they had struck a nerve. Their email inboxes were overflowing, their social media mentions were through the roof, and their website was attracting visitors from nearly every country in the world.

Media attention soon followed, first from websites such as Inc. and Boing Boing, then from local newspapers and television and radio stations. NPR ran a report on its national broadcast; The New Yorker, Lifehacker, Daily Kos and dozens of other outlets reported the story of the college professors who were taking a stand against BS.

All of the attention caught West and Bergstrom off-guard. Overnight, they became the 鈥淐alling Bullshit guys,鈥 fielding requests for speaking engagements all over the country.

Most promisingly for the duo, the media attention sparked educators at dozens of colleges and high schools to reach out as they developed their own versions of the course. At last count, some 60 colleges and universities had contacted West and Bergstrom, and they know of many high schools 鈥 both locally and across the country 鈥 that are using the materials from CallingBullshit.org in their classrooms. The professors secured a $50,000 grant from the Knight Foundation to help equip high school students, journalists and the general public to call BS.

鈥淧谤辞产补产濒测 the most exciting thing of all has been all the conversations with universities and high schools around the country,鈥 West said. 鈥淭hree big areas that I鈥檓 starting to focus on are educators at high schools and colleges, the librarian community, and the journalism community. They鈥檙e on the front lines of this battle against misinformation.鈥

One of those in the trenches is Christina Serkowski, an English teacher at University Prep in Seattle. She began teaching a class this fall called 鈥淎n Intentional Media Diet鈥 that focuses on how people are interacting with media and digital technologies. She reached out to the UW professors over the summer as she developed her class and has adapted some of their curriculum for her high school students.

Serkowski, who also credits iSchool Assistant Professor Katie Davis and her book for informing the class, said students sorely need to know how to navigate media and think critically about the information at their fingertips. With even middle schoolers carrying smartphones, 鈥渢hey are seeing it all,鈥 she said, and their most trusted sources often are their peers 鈥 or Snapchat.

鈥淭he people who are using these technologies need to understand the way they affect us as individuals and societies," she said. 鈥淲e endlessly adopt the newest devices and platforms without careful consideration of the very real hazards as well as the latent potential each presents.鈥

'Exactly what we were looking for'

At the in New Orleans, history and government teacher Carolyn Thompson Tapp and chemistry teacher Catherine Cresson are co-instructing a monthlong unit for high school juniors that borrows much of the Calling Bullshit curriculum and even its somewhat profane name.

鈥淲e were searching for things that would help us address the whole idea of how you help kids to evaluate information,鈥 Thompson Tapp said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a regular topic of conversation, how to deal with the changing information environment. We came across the Calling Bullshit curriculum and it was exactly what we were looking for.鈥

Over the summer, the teachers watched all of the lectures from the spring course on the and studied the materials on the course website. They returned ready to train students to become more savvy information consumers.

After just a few weeks in the class, students had become detectives of sorts, questioning information, tracing it to its sources and weighing whether those sources were trustworthy, Cresson said.

鈥淚t鈥檚 pretty awesome how it鈥檚 really inspired them to tackle some really difficult sources and information,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey feel much more empowered to deal with the information they are receiving on a daily basis.鈥

 

Here at home, West and Bergstrom followed last spring鈥檚 1-credit seminar with a 3-credit course this fall, and they plan to continue offering it once each year. They hope to develop a MOOC 鈥 a massive open online course 鈥 to reach a wider audience; and their book, which they are writing for a general audience, not just for academics, is due out in a year or so.

Calling Bullshit isn鈥檛 just a curiosity. It has staying power.

鈥淚f it went away because we solved the problem, I鈥檇 be like, 鈥楪reat, we鈥檙e done. Move on to the next thing,鈥 鈥 West said. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 going to be a problem for some time. There鈥檚 just a lot of BS, and the more that we can teach the public how to think critically, the better off we all are.鈥