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02:13, 25 June 2021: 210.55.88.11 (talk) triggered filter 61, performing the action "edit" on Code. Actions taken: Tag; Filter description: New user removing references (examine)

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{{short description|System of rules to convert information into another form or representation}}
{{short description|System ofPHIC NUMERALS"
|publisher Inquiry Framing
{{Other uses}}
Topic: Capitalism
{{Redirect|Encoding|other uses|Encoding (disambiguation)}}
{{For|[[Wikipedia:Naming conventions (technical restrictions)#Forbidden characters|technical reasons]], "Code#01 Bad Girl" and "Code#02 Pretty Pretty" redirect here. For the EPs by Ladies' Code|Code 01 Bad Girl|Code 02 Pretty Pretty}}
{{More citations needed|date=March 2010}}
In [[communication]]s and [[information processing]], '''code''' is a system of rules to convert [[information]]—such as a [[letter (alphabet)|letter]], [[word]], sound, image, or [[gesture]]—into another form, sometimes [[data compression|shortened]] or [[secrecy|secret]], for communication through a [[communication channel]] or storage in a [[storage medium]]. An early example is an invention of [[language]], which enabled a person, through [[speech]], to communicate what they thought, saw, heard, or felt to others. But speech limits the range of communication to the distance a voice can carry and limits the audience to those present when the speech is uttered. The invention of [[writing]], which converted spoken language into [[visual system|visual]] [[symbol]]s, extended the range of communication across space and [[time]].


The process of '''encoding''' converts information from a [[communication source|source]] into symbols for communication or storage. '''Decoding''' is the reverse process, converting code symbols back into a form that the recipient understands, such as English or/and Spanish.


What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name.
One reason for coding is to enable communication in places where ordinary [[plain language]], spoken or written, is difficult or impossible. For example, [[semaphore]], where the configuration of [[Flag semaphore|flags]] held by a signaler or the arms of a [[semaphore line|semaphore tower]] encodes parts of the message, typically individual letters, and numbers. Another person standing a great distance away can interpret the flags and reproduce the words sent.


== Theory ==
{{main|Coding theory}}
In [[information theory]] and [[computer science]], a code is usually considered as an [[algorithm]] that uniquely represents [[symbols]] from some source [[alphabet (computer science)|alphabet]], by ''encoded'' strings, which may be in some other target alphabet. An extension of the code for representing sequences of symbols over the source alphabet is obtained by concatenating the encoded strings.


How topic links to a studied text:
Before giving a mathematically precise definition, this is a brief example. The mapping
Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’
:<math>C = \{\, a\mapsto 0, b\mapsto 01, c\mapsto 011\,\}</math>
is a code, whose source alphabet is the set <math>\{a,b,c\}</math> and whose target alphabet is the set <math>\{0,1\}</math>. Using the extension of the code, the encoded string 0011001 can be grouped into codewords as 0 011 0 01, and these in turn can be decoded to the sequence of source symbols ''acab''.


Using terms from [[formal language theory]], the precise mathematical definition of this concept is as follows: let S and T be two finite sets, called the source and target [[alphabet (computer science)|alphabets]], respectively. A '''code''' <math>C:\, S \to T^*</math> is a [[total function]] mapping each symbol from S to a [[String (computer science)|sequence of symbols]] over T. The '''extension''' <math>C'</math> of <math>C</math>, is a [[Homomorphism#Homomorphisms and e-free homomorphisms in formal language theory|homomorphism]] of <math>S^*</math> into <math>T^*</math>, which naturally maps each sequence of source symbols to a sequence of target symbols.


Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society.
=== Variable-length codes ===
{{main|Variable-length code}}
In this section, we consider codes that encode each source (clear text) character by a [[code word]] from some dictionary, and [[concatenation]] of such code words give us an encoded string. Variable-length codes are especially useful when clear text characters have different probabilities; see also [[entropy encoding]].


A ''prefix code'' is a code with the "prefix property": there is no valid code word in the system that is a [[prefix (computer science)|prefix]] (start) of any other valid code word in the set. [[Huffman coding]] is the most known algorithm for deriving prefix codes. Prefix codes are widely referred to as "Huffman codes" even when the code was not produced by a Huffman algorithm. Other examples of prefix codes are [[country calling codes]], the country and publisher parts of [[ISBN]]s, and the Secondary Synchronization Codes used in the [[UMTS]] [[W-CDMA|WCDMA]] 3G Wireless Standard.


Key questions:
[[Kraft's inequality]] characterizes the sets of codeword lengths that are possible in a prefix code. Virtually any uniquely decodable one-to-many code, not necessarily a prefix one, must satisfy Kraft's inequality.
At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal
1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes
2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts
3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism


=== Error-correcting codes ===
{{main|Error detection and correction}}
{{see also|Block code}}
Codes may also be used to represent data in a way more resistant to errors in transmission or storage. This so-called [[Error detection and correction|error-correcting code]] works by including carefully crafted redundancy with the stored (or transmitted) data. Examples include [[Hamming code]]s, [[Reed–Solomon]], [[Reed–Muller code|Reed–Muller]], [[Walsh–Hadamard code|Walsh–Hadamard]], [[BCH code|Bose–Chaudhuri–Hochquenghem]], [[Turbo code|Turbo]], [[Binary Golay code|Golay]], [[Goppa code|Goppa]], [[low-density parity-check code]]s, and [[space–time code]]s.
Error detecting codes can be optimised to detect ''burst errors'', or ''random errors''.


== Examples ==
=== Codes in communication used for brevity ===
A cable code replaces words (e.g. ''ship'' or ''invoice'') with shorter words, allowing the same information to be sent with fewer [[character (computing)|characters]], more quickly, and less expensively.


Codes can be used for brevity. When [[Telegraphy|telegraph]] messages were the state of the art in rapid long-distance communication, elaborate systems of [[commercial code (communications)|commercial codes]] that encoded complete phrases into single mouths (commonly five-minute groups) were developed, so that telegraphers became conversant with such "words" as ''BYOXO'' ("Are you trying to weasel out of our deal?"), ''LIOUY'' ("Why do you not answer my question?"), ''BMULD'' ("You're a skunk!"), or ''AYYLU'' ("Not clearly coded, repeat more clearly."). [[Code word]]s were chosen for various reasons: [[length]], [[pronounceability]], etc. Meanings were chosen to fit perceived needs: commercial negotiations, military terms for military codes, diplomatic terms for diplomatic codes, any and all of the preceding for espionage codes. Codebooks and codebook publishers proliferated, including one run as a front for the American [[Black Chamber]] run by [[Herbert Yardley]] between the First and Second World Wars. The purpose of most of these codes was to save on cable costs. The use of data coding for [[data compression]] predates the computer era; an early example is the telegraph [[Morse code]] where more-frequently used characters have shorter representations. Techniques such as [[Huffman coding]] are now used by computer-based [[algorithm]]s to compress large data files into a more compact form for storage or transmission.


Source #1
=== Character encodings ===
Title: Parasite
{{Main|Character encoding}}
Type of source: Movie
Character encodings are representations of textual data. A given character encoding may be associated with a specific character set (the collection of characters which it can represent), though some character sets have multiple character encodings and vice versa. Character encodings may be broadly grouped according to the number of bytes required to represent a single character: there are single-byte encodings, [[Wide character|multibyte]] (also called wide) encodings, and [[Variable-width encoding|variable-width]] (also called variable-length) encodings. The earliest character encodings were single-byte, the best-known example of which is [[ASCII]]. ASCII remains in use today, for example in [[HTTP headers]]. However, single-byte encodings cannot model character sets with more than 256 characters. Scripts that require large character sets such as [[CJK|Chinese, Japanese and Korean]] must be represented with multibyte encodings. Early multibyte encodings were fixed-length, meaning that although each character was represented by more than one byte, all characters used the same number of bytes ("word length"), making them suitable for decoding with a lookup table. The final group, variable-width encodings, is a subset of multibyte encodings. These use more complex encoding and decoding logic to efficiently represent large character sets while keeping the representations of more commonly used characters shorter or maintaining backward compatibility properties. This group includes [[UTF-8]], an encoding of the [[Unicode]] character set; UTF-8 is the most common encoding of text media on the Internet.
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment
Date Published: 27 June 2019
Date Accessed: March 2021
Summary/What is it about
The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life.


=== Genetic code ===
{{Main|Genetic code}}
[[Biology|Biological]] organisms contain genetic material that is used to control their function and development. This is [[DNA]], which contains units named [[gene]]s from which [[messenger RNA]] is derived. This in turn produces [[protein]]s through a [[genetic code]] in which a series of triplets ([[codon]]s) of four possible [[nucleotides]] can be translated into one of twenty possible [[amino acid]]s. A sequence of codons results in a corresponding sequence of amino acids that form a protein molecule; a type of codon called a [[stop codon]] signals the end of the sequence.


===Gödel code===
In [[mathematics]], a [[Gödel code]] was the basis for the proof of [[Gödel]]'s [[incompleteness theorem]]. Here, the idea was to map [[mathematical notation]] to a [[natural number]] (using a [[Gödel numbering]]).


Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
=== Other ===
This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else.
There are codes using colors, like [[traffic lights]], the [[Electronic color code|color code]] employed to mark the nominal value of the [[Resistor|electrical resistor]]s or that of the trashcans devoted to specific types of garbage (paper, glass, organic, etc.).


In [[marketing]], [[coupon]] codes can be used for a financial discount or rebate when purchasing a product from a (usual internet) retailer.


Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
In military environments, specific sounds with the [[cornet]] are used for different uses: to mark some moments of the day, to command the infantry on the battlefield, etc.
This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made.


Communication systems for sensory impairments, such as [[sign language]] for deaf people and [[braille]] for blind people, are based on movement or tactile codes.


[[Sheet music|Musical scores]] are the most common way to encode [[music]].


Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):
Specific games have their own code systems to record the matches, e.g. [[chess notation]].
There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism.


=== Cryptography ===
In the [[history of cryptography]], [[Code (cryptography)|codes]] were once common for ensuring the confidentiality of communications, although [[cipher]]s are now used instead.


Secret codes intended to obscure the real messages, ranging from serious (mainly [[espionage]] in military, diplomacy, business, etc.) to trivial (romance, games) can be any kind of imaginative encoding: [[Language of flowers|flowers]], game cards, clothes, fans, hats, melodies, birds, etc., in which the sole requirement is the pre-agreement on the meaning by both the sender and the receiver.


== Other examples ==
Other examples of encoding include:
*Encoding (in [[cognition]]) - a basic perceptual process of interpreting incoming stimuli; technically speaking, it is a complex, multi-stage process of converting relatively objective sensory input (e.g., light, sound) into a subjectively meaningful experience.
*A [[content format]] - a specific encoding format for converting a specific type of [[data]] to [[information]].
*Text encoding uses a [[markup language]] to tag the structure and other features of a text to facilitate processing by computers. (See also [[Text Encoding Initiative]].)
*[[Semantics encoding]] of formal language A informal language B is a method of representing all terms (e.g. programs or descriptions) of language A using language B.
*[[Data compression]] transforms a signal into a code optimized for [[Transmission (telecommunications)|transmission]] or [[data storage device|storage]], generally done with a [[codec]].
*[[Neural encoding]] - the way in which information is represented in [[neuron]]s.
*[[Memory encoding]] - the process of converting sensations into memories.
*[[Television encoding]]: [[NTSC]], [[PAL]] and [[SECAM]]


Reliability: delete the table that does not apply
Other examples of decoding include:
* [[Parsing|Decoding (computer science)]]
* [[Decoding methods]], methods in communication theory for decoding codewords sent over a noisy channel
* [[Digital signal processing]], the study of signals in a digital representation and the processing methods of these signals
* [[Digital-to-analog converter]], the use of analog circuit for decoding operations
* Word decoding, the use of [[phonics]] to decipher print patterns and translate them into the sounds of language


Reliability: Non-fiction texts
==Codes and acronyms==
*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
[[Acronym]]s and abbreviations can be considered codes, and in a sense, all [[language]]s and [[writing system]]s are codes for human thought.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.
My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families


I believe this source is/is not reliable because:
[[International Air Transport Association airport code]]s are three-letter codes used to designate airports and used for [[bag tag]]s. [[Station code]]s are similarly used on railways but are usually national, so the same code can be used for different stations if they are in different countries.


Occasionally, a code word achieves an independent existence (and meaning) while the original equivalent phrase is forgotten or at least no longer has the precise meaning attributed to the code word. For example, '30' was widely used in [[journalism]] to mean "end of story", and has been used in [[-30-|other contexts]] to signify "the end".<ref>Kogan, Hadass [http://www.ajr.org/Article.asp?id=4408 "So Why Not 29"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101212101705/http://ajr.org/Article.asp?id=4408 |date=2010-12-12 }} American Journalism Review. Retrieved 2012-07-03.</ref>
<ref>{{cite web
|title = WESTERN UNION "92 CODE" & WOOD'S "TELEGRAPHIC NUMERALS"
|publisher = Signal Corps Association
|year = 1996
|url = http://www.civilwarsignals.org/pages/tele/wurules1866/92code.html
|access-date = 2012-07-03
|url-status = live
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120509135118/http://www.civilwarsignals.org/pages/tele/wurules1866/92code.html
|archive-date = 2012-05-09
}}</ref>


== See also ==
{{Commons category|Codes}}
* [[Asemic writing]]
* [[Cipher]]
* [[Code (semiotics)]]
* [[Equipment codes]]
* [[Quantum error correction]]
* [[Semiotics]]
* [[Universal language]]


== References ==
{{reflist}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Chevance |first1=Fabienne |title=Case for the genetic code as a triplet of triplets |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America |volume=114 |issue=18 |pages=4745–4750 |pmc=5422812 |year=2017 |pmid=28416671 |doi=10.1073/pnas.1614896114 }}



[[Category:Encodings]]

[[Category:Signal processing]]


Source #2
Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed


Type of source: Blog
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed
Date Published: September 2nd. 2019
Date Accessed: 16/06/21
Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers.



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation


Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):






Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts

(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
✔ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because:
I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece.





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.










Source #3
Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist


Type of source:
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist
Date Published: September 19 2020
Date Accessed: 18 June 2021
Summary/What is it about
This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man.




Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it.





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Source #4
Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?



Type of source: Blog
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?
Date Published: 24 August 2020
Date Accessed: 22 June 2021
Summary/What is it about
This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed.


Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation.



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):

1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat.





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too.





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Source #5
Title:


Type of source:
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details:
Date Published:
Date Accessed:
Summary/What is it about



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because:





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Source #6
Title:
Type of source:
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details:
Date Published:
Date Accessed:
Summary/What is it about



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because:





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Inquiry Framing
Topic: Capitalism


What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name.


How topic links to a studied text:
Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’


Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society.


Key questions:
At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal
1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes
2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts
3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism




Source #1
Title: Parasite
Type of source: Movie
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment
Date Published: 27 June 2019
Date Accessed: March 2021
Summary/What is it about
The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life.



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else.


Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made.



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):
There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism.




Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.
My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families

I believe this source is/is not reliable because:








Source #2
Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed


Type of source: Blog
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed
Date Published: September 2nd. 2019
Date Accessed: 16/06/21
Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers.



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation


Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):






Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts

(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
✔ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because:
I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece.





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.










Source #3
Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist


Type of source:
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist
Date Published: September 19 2020
Date Accessed: 18 June 2021
Summary/What is it about
This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man.




Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it.





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Source #4
Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?



Type of source: Blog
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?
Date Published: 24 August 2020
Date Accessed: 22 June 2021
Summary/What is it about
This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed.


Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation.



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):

1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat.





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too.





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Source #5
Title:


Type of source:
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details:
Date Published:
Date Accessed:
Summary/What is it about



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because:





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Source #6
Title:
Type of source:
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details:
Date Published:
Date Accessed:
Summary/What is it about



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because:





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Inquiry Framing
Topic: Capitalism


What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name.


How topic links to a studied text:
Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’


Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society.


Key questions:
At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal
1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes
2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts
3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism




Source #1
Title: Parasite
Type of source: Movie
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment
Date Published: 27 June 2019
Date Accessed: March 2021
Summary/What is it about
The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life.



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else.


Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made.



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):
There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism.




Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.
My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families

I believe this source is/is not reliable because:








Source #2
Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed


Type of source: Blog
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed
Date Published: September 2nd. 2019
Date Accessed: 16/06/21
Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers.



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation


Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):






Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts

(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
✔ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because:
I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece.





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.










Source #3
Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist


Type of source:
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist
Date Published: September 19 2020
Date Accessed: 18 June 2021
Summary/What is it about
This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man.




Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it.





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Source #4
Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?



Type of source: Blog
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?
Date Published: 24 August 2020
Date Accessed: 22 June 2021
Summary/What is it about
This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed.


Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation.



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):

1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat.





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too.





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Source #5
Title:


Type of source:
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details:
Date Published:
Date Accessed:
Summary/What is it about



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because:





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Source #6
Title:
Type of source:
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details:
Date Published:
Date Accessed:
Summary/What is it about



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because:





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Inquiry Framing
Topic: Capitalism


What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name.


How topic links to a studied text:
Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’


Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society.


Key questions:
At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal
1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes
2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts
3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism




Source #1
Title: Parasite
Type of source: Movie
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment
Date Published: 27 June 2019
Date Accessed: March 2021
Summary/What is it about
The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life.



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else.


Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made.



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):
There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism.




Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.
My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families

I believe this source is/is not reliable because:








Source #2
Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed


Type of source: Blog
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed
Date Published: September 2nd. 2019
Date Accessed: 16/06/21
Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers.



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation


Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):






Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts

(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
✔ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because:
I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece.





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.










Source #3
Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist


Type of source:
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist
Date Published: September 19 2020
Date Accessed: 18 June 2021
Summary/What is it about
This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man.




Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it.





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Source #4
Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?



Type of source: Blog
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?
Date Published: 24 August 2020
Date Accessed: 22 June 2021
Summary/What is it about
This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed.


Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation.



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):

1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat.





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too.





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Source #5
Title:


Type of source:
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details:
Date Published:
Date Accessed:
Summary/What is it about



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because:





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Source #6
Title:
Type of source:
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details:
Date Published:
Date Accessed:
Summary/What is it about



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because:





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Inquiry Framing
Topic: Capitalism


What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name.


How topic links to a studied text:
Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’


Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society.


Key questions:
At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal
1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes
2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts
3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism




Source #1
Title: Parasite
Type of source: Movie
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment
Date Published: 27 June 2019
Date Accessed: March 2021
Summary/What is it about
The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life.



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else.


Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made.



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):
There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism.




Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.
My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families

I believe this source is/is not reliable because:








Source #2
Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed


Type of source: Blog
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed
Date Published: September 2nd. 2019
Date Accessed: 16/06/21
Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers.



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation


Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):






Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts

(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
✔ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because:
I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece.





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.










Source #3
Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist


Type of source:
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist
Date Published: September 19 2020
Date Accessed: 18 June 2021
Summary/What is it about
This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man.




Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it.





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Source #4
Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?



Type of source: Blog
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?
Date Published: 24 August 2020
Date Accessed: 22 June 2021
Summary/What is it about
This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed.


Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation.



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):

1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat.





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too.





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Source #5
Title:


Type of source:
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details:
Date Published:
Date Accessed:
Summary/What is it about



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because:





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Source #6
Title:
Type of source:
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details:
Date Published:
Date Accessed:
Summary/What is it about



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because:





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Inquiry Framing
Topic: Capitalism


What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name.


How topic links to a studied text:
Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’


Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society.


Key questions:
At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal
1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes
2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts
3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism




Source #1
Title: Parasite
Type of source: Movie
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment
Date Published: 27 June 2019
Date Accessed: March 2021
Summary/What is it about
The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life.



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else.


Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made.



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):
There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism.




Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.
My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families

I believe this source is/is not reliable because:








Source #2
Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed


Type of source: Blog
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed
Date Published: September 2nd. 2019
Date Accessed: 16/06/21
Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers.



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation


Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):






Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts

(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
✔ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because:
I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece.





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.










Source #3
Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist


Type of source:
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist
Date Published: September 19 2020
Date Accessed: 18 June 2021
Summary/What is it about
This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man.




Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it.





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Source #4
Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?



Type of source: Blog
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?
Date Published: 24 August 2020
Date Accessed: 22 June 2021
Summary/What is it about
This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed.


Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation.



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):

1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat.





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too.





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Source #5
Title:


Type of source:
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details:
Date Published:
Date Accessed:
Summary/What is it about



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because:





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Source #6
Title:
Type of source:
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details:
Date Published:
Date Accessed:
Summary/What is it about



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because:





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Inquiry Framing
Topic: Capitalism


What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name.


How topic links to a studied text:
Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’


Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society.


Key questions:
At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal
1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes
2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts
3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism




Source #1
Title: Parasite
Type of source: Movie
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment
Date Published: 27 June 2019
Date Accessed: March 2021
Summary/What is it about
The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life.



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else.


Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made.



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):
There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism.




Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.
My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families

I believe this source is/is not reliable because:








Source #2
Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed


Type of source: Blog
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed
Date Published: September 2nd. 2019
Date Accessed: 16/06/21
Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers.



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation


Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):






Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts

(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
✔ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because:
I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece.





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.










Source #3
Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist


Type of source:
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist
Date Published: September 19 2020
Date Accessed: 18 June 2021
Summary/What is it about
This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man.




Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it.





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Source #4
Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?



Type of source: Blog
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?
Date Published: 24 August 2020
Date Accessed: 22 June 2021
Summary/What is it about
This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed.


Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation.



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):

1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat.





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too.





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Source #5
Title:


Type of source:
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details:
Date Published:
Date Accessed:
Summary/What is it about



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because:





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Source #6
Title:
Type of source:
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details:
Date Published:
Date Accessed:
Summary/What is it about



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because:





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Inquiry Framing
Topic: Capitalism


What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name.


How topic links to a studied text:
Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’


Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society.


Key questions:
At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal
1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes
2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts
3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism




Source #1
Title: Parasite
Type of source: Movie
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment
Date Published: 27 June 2019
Date Accessed: March 2021
Summary/What is it about
The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life.



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else.


Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made.



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):
There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism.




Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.
My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families

I believe this source is/is not reliable because:








Source #2
Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed


Type of source: Blog
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed
Date Published: September 2nd. 2019
Date Accessed: 16/06/21
Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers.



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation


Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):






Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts

(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
✔ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because:
I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece.





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.










Source #3
Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist


Type of source:
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist
Date Published: September 19 2020
Date Accessed: 18 June 2021
Summary/What is it about
This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man.




Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it.





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Source #4
Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?



Type of source: Blog
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?
Date Published: 24 August 2020
Date Accessed: 22 June 2021
Summary/What is it about
This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?
This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed.


Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?
It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation.



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):

1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat.





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
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(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too.





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Source #5
Title:


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Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details:
Date Published:
Date Accessed:
Summary/What is it about



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because:





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction texts
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:







Source #6
Title:
Type of source:
Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video
URL or publication details:
Date Published:
Date Accessed:
Summary/What is it about



Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?



Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?



Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):





Reliability: delete the table that does not apply

Reliability: Non-fiction texts
(Probably) More reliable
(Probably) Less reliable
(Possibly) Unreliable
☐ Recent publication date
☐ Older publication date
☐ No publication date
☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site)
☐ Has author’s name
☐No author
☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts
☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find
☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references
☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site


☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment
☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased
☐ Easy to find similar articles




☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article
☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate


☐ Site is poorly designed
☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR




I believe this source is/is not reliable because:





*check Wikipedia or this infographic.
Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/
“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.



I believe this source is/is not reliable because:

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'{{short description|System of rules to convert information into another form or representation}} {{Other uses}} {{Redirect|Encoding|other uses|Encoding (disambiguation)}} {{For|[[Wikipedia:Naming conventions (technical restrictions)#Forbidden characters|technical reasons]], "Code#01 Bad Girl" and "Code#02 Pretty Pretty" redirect here. For the EPs by Ladies' Code|Code 01 Bad Girl|Code 02 Pretty Pretty}} {{More citations needed|date=March 2010}} In [[communication]]s and [[information processing]], '''code''' is a system of rules to convert [[information]]—such as a [[letter (alphabet)|letter]], [[word]], sound, image, or [[gesture]]—into another form, sometimes [[data compression|shortened]] or [[secrecy|secret]], for communication through a [[communication channel]] or storage in a [[storage medium]]. An early example is an invention of [[language]], which enabled a person, through [[speech]], to communicate what they thought, saw, heard, or felt to others. But speech limits the range of communication to the distance a voice can carry and limits the audience to those present when the speech is uttered. The invention of [[writing]], which converted spoken language into [[visual system|visual]] [[symbol]]s, extended the range of communication across space and [[time]]. The process of '''encoding''' converts information from a [[communication source|source]] into symbols for communication or storage. '''Decoding''' is the reverse process, converting code symbols back into a form that the recipient understands, such as English or/and Spanish. One reason for coding is to enable communication in places where ordinary [[plain language]], spoken or written, is difficult or impossible. For example, [[semaphore]], where the configuration of [[Flag semaphore|flags]] held by a signaler or the arms of a [[semaphore line|semaphore tower]] encodes parts of the message, typically individual letters, and numbers. Another person standing a great distance away can interpret the flags and reproduce the words sent. == Theory == {{main|Coding theory}} In [[information theory]] and [[computer science]], a code is usually considered as an [[algorithm]] that uniquely represents [[symbols]] from some source [[alphabet (computer science)|alphabet]], by ''encoded'' strings, which may be in some other target alphabet. An extension of the code for representing sequences of symbols over the source alphabet is obtained by concatenating the encoded strings. Before giving a mathematically precise definition, this is a brief example. The mapping :<math>C = \{\, a\mapsto 0, b\mapsto 01, c\mapsto 011\,\}</math> is a code, whose source alphabet is the set <math>\{a,b,c\}</math> and whose target alphabet is the set <math>\{0,1\}</math>. Using the extension of the code, the encoded string 0011001 can be grouped into codewords as 0 011 0 01, and these in turn can be decoded to the sequence of source symbols ''acab''. Using terms from [[formal language theory]], the precise mathematical definition of this concept is as follows: let S and T be two finite sets, called the source and target [[alphabet (computer science)|alphabets]], respectively. A '''code''' <math>C:\, S \to T^*</math> is a [[total function]] mapping each symbol from S to a [[String (computer science)|sequence of symbols]] over T. The '''extension''' <math>C'</math> of <math>C</math>, is a [[Homomorphism#Homomorphisms and e-free homomorphisms in formal language theory|homomorphism]] of <math>S^*</math> into <math>T^*</math>, which naturally maps each sequence of source symbols to a sequence of target symbols. === Variable-length codes === {{main|Variable-length code}} In this section, we consider codes that encode each source (clear text) character by a [[code word]] from some dictionary, and [[concatenation]] of such code words give us an encoded string. Variable-length codes are especially useful when clear text characters have different probabilities; see also [[entropy encoding]]. A ''prefix code'' is a code with the "prefix property": there is no valid code word in the system that is a [[prefix (computer science)|prefix]] (start) of any other valid code word in the set. [[Huffman coding]] is the most known algorithm for deriving prefix codes. Prefix codes are widely referred to as "Huffman codes" even when the code was not produced by a Huffman algorithm. Other examples of prefix codes are [[country calling codes]], the country and publisher parts of [[ISBN]]s, and the Secondary Synchronization Codes used in the [[UMTS]] [[W-CDMA|WCDMA]] 3G Wireless Standard. [[Kraft's inequality]] characterizes the sets of codeword lengths that are possible in a prefix code. Virtually any uniquely decodable one-to-many code, not necessarily a prefix one, must satisfy Kraft's inequality. === Error-correcting codes === {{main|Error detection and correction}} {{see also|Block code}} Codes may also be used to represent data in a way more resistant to errors in transmission or storage. This so-called [[Error detection and correction|error-correcting code]] works by including carefully crafted redundancy with the stored (or transmitted) data. Examples include [[Hamming code]]s, [[Reed–Solomon]], [[Reed–Muller code|Reed–Muller]], [[Walsh–Hadamard code|Walsh–Hadamard]], [[BCH code|Bose–Chaudhuri–Hochquenghem]], [[Turbo code|Turbo]], [[Binary Golay code|Golay]], [[Goppa code|Goppa]], [[low-density parity-check code]]s, and [[space–time code]]s. Error detecting codes can be optimised to detect ''burst errors'', or ''random errors''. == Examples == === Codes in communication used for brevity === A cable code replaces words (e.g. ''ship'' or ''invoice'') with shorter words, allowing the same information to be sent with fewer [[character (computing)|characters]], more quickly, and less expensively. Codes can be used for brevity. When [[Telegraphy|telegraph]] messages were the state of the art in rapid long-distance communication, elaborate systems of [[commercial code (communications)|commercial codes]] that encoded complete phrases into single mouths (commonly five-minute groups) were developed, so that telegraphers became conversant with such "words" as ''BYOXO'' ("Are you trying to weasel out of our deal?"), ''LIOUY'' ("Why do you not answer my question?"), ''BMULD'' ("You're a skunk!"), or ''AYYLU'' ("Not clearly coded, repeat more clearly."). [[Code word]]s were chosen for various reasons: [[length]], [[pronounceability]], etc. Meanings were chosen to fit perceived needs: commercial negotiations, military terms for military codes, diplomatic terms for diplomatic codes, any and all of the preceding for espionage codes. Codebooks and codebook publishers proliferated, including one run as a front for the American [[Black Chamber]] run by [[Herbert Yardley]] between the First and Second World Wars. The purpose of most of these codes was to save on cable costs. The use of data coding for [[data compression]] predates the computer era; an early example is the telegraph [[Morse code]] where more-frequently used characters have shorter representations. Techniques such as [[Huffman coding]] are now used by computer-based [[algorithm]]s to compress large data files into a more compact form for storage or transmission. === Character encodings === {{Main|Character encoding}} Character encodings are representations of textual data. A given character encoding may be associated with a specific character set (the collection of characters which it can represent), though some character sets have multiple character encodings and vice versa. Character encodings may be broadly grouped according to the number of bytes required to represent a single character: there are single-byte encodings, [[Wide character|multibyte]] (also called wide) encodings, and [[Variable-width encoding|variable-width]] (also called variable-length) encodings. The earliest character encodings were single-byte, the best-known example of which is [[ASCII]]. ASCII remains in use today, for example in [[HTTP headers]]. However, single-byte encodings cannot model character sets with more than 256 characters. Scripts that require large character sets such as [[CJK|Chinese, Japanese and Korean]] must be represented with multibyte encodings. Early multibyte encodings were fixed-length, meaning that although each character was represented by more than one byte, all characters used the same number of bytes ("word length"), making them suitable for decoding with a lookup table. The final group, variable-width encodings, is a subset of multibyte encodings. These use more complex encoding and decoding logic to efficiently represent large character sets while keeping the representations of more commonly used characters shorter or maintaining backward compatibility properties. This group includes [[UTF-8]], an encoding of the [[Unicode]] character set; UTF-8 is the most common encoding of text media on the Internet. === Genetic code === {{Main|Genetic code}} [[Biology|Biological]] organisms contain genetic material that is used to control their function and development. This is [[DNA]], which contains units named [[gene]]s from which [[messenger RNA]] is derived. This in turn produces [[protein]]s through a [[genetic code]] in which a series of triplets ([[codon]]s) of four possible [[nucleotides]] can be translated into one of twenty possible [[amino acid]]s. A sequence of codons results in a corresponding sequence of amino acids that form a protein molecule; a type of codon called a [[stop codon]] signals the end of the sequence. ===Gödel code=== In [[mathematics]], a [[Gödel code]] was the basis for the proof of [[Gödel]]'s [[incompleteness theorem]]. Here, the idea was to map [[mathematical notation]] to a [[natural number]] (using a [[Gödel numbering]]). === Other === There are codes using colors, like [[traffic lights]], the [[Electronic color code|color code]] employed to mark the nominal value of the [[Resistor|electrical resistor]]s or that of the trashcans devoted to specific types of garbage (paper, glass, organic, etc.). In [[marketing]], [[coupon]] codes can be used for a financial discount or rebate when purchasing a product from a (usual internet) retailer. In military environments, specific sounds with the [[cornet]] are used for different uses: to mark some moments of the day, to command the infantry on the battlefield, etc. Communication systems for sensory impairments, such as [[sign language]] for deaf people and [[braille]] for blind people, are based on movement or tactile codes. [[Sheet music|Musical scores]] are the most common way to encode [[music]]. Specific games have their own code systems to record the matches, e.g. [[chess notation]]. === Cryptography === In the [[history of cryptography]], [[Code (cryptography)|codes]] were once common for ensuring the confidentiality of communications, although [[cipher]]s are now used instead. Secret codes intended to obscure the real messages, ranging from serious (mainly [[espionage]] in military, diplomacy, business, etc.) to trivial (romance, games) can be any kind of imaginative encoding: [[Language of flowers|flowers]], game cards, clothes, fans, hats, melodies, birds, etc., in which the sole requirement is the pre-agreement on the meaning by both the sender and the receiver. == Other examples == Other examples of encoding include: *Encoding (in [[cognition]]) - a basic perceptual process of interpreting incoming stimuli; technically speaking, it is a complex, multi-stage process of converting relatively objective sensory input (e.g., light, sound) into a subjectively meaningful experience. *A [[content format]] - a specific encoding format for converting a specific type of [[data]] to [[information]]. *Text encoding uses a [[markup language]] to tag the structure and other features of a text to facilitate processing by computers. (See also [[Text Encoding Initiative]].) *[[Semantics encoding]] of formal language A informal language B is a method of representing all terms (e.g. programs or descriptions) of language A using language B. *[[Data compression]] transforms a signal into a code optimized for [[Transmission (telecommunications)|transmission]] or [[data storage device|storage]], generally done with a [[codec]]. *[[Neural encoding]] - the way in which information is represented in [[neuron]]s. *[[Memory encoding]] - the process of converting sensations into memories. *[[Television encoding]]: [[NTSC]], [[PAL]] and [[SECAM]] Other examples of decoding include: * [[Parsing|Decoding (computer science)]] * [[Decoding methods]], methods in communication theory for decoding codewords sent over a noisy channel * [[Digital signal processing]], the study of signals in a digital representation and the processing methods of these signals * [[Digital-to-analog converter]], the use of analog circuit for decoding operations * Word decoding, the use of [[phonics]] to decipher print patterns and translate them into the sounds of language ==Codes and acronyms== [[Acronym]]s and abbreviations can be considered codes, and in a sense, all [[language]]s and [[writing system]]s are codes for human thought. [[International Air Transport Association airport code]]s are three-letter codes used to designate airports and used for [[bag tag]]s. [[Station code]]s are similarly used on railways but are usually national, so the same code can be used for different stations if they are in different countries. Occasionally, a code word achieves an independent existence (and meaning) while the original equivalent phrase is forgotten or at least no longer has the precise meaning attributed to the code word. For example, '30' was widely used in [[journalism]] to mean "end of story", and has been used in [[-30-|other contexts]] to signify "the end".<ref>Kogan, Hadass [http://www.ajr.org/Article.asp?id=4408 "So Why Not 29"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101212101705/http://ajr.org/Article.asp?id=4408 |date=2010-12-12 }} American Journalism Review. Retrieved 2012-07-03.</ref> <ref>{{cite web |title = WESTERN UNION "92 CODE" & WOOD'S "TELEGRAPHIC NUMERALS" |publisher = Signal Corps Association |year = 1996 |url = http://www.civilwarsignals.org/pages/tele/wurules1866/92code.html |access-date = 2012-07-03 |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120509135118/http://www.civilwarsignals.org/pages/tele/wurules1866/92code.html |archive-date = 2012-05-09 }}</ref> == See also == {{Commons category|Codes}} * [[Asemic writing]] * [[Cipher]] * [[Code (semiotics)]] * [[Equipment codes]] * [[Quantum error correction]] * [[Semiotics]] * [[Universal language]] == References == {{reflist}} * {{cite journal |last1=Chevance |first1=Fabienne |title=Case for the genetic code as a triplet of triplets |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America |volume=114 |issue=18 |pages=4745–4750 |pmc=5422812 |year=2017 |pmid=28416671 |doi=10.1073/pnas.1614896114 }} [[Category:Encodings]] [[Category:Signal processing]]'
New page wikitext, after the edit (new_wikitext)
'{{short description|System ofPHIC NUMERALS" |publisher Inquiry Framing Topic: Capitalism What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name. How topic links to a studied text: Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’ Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society. Key questions: At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal 1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes 2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts 3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism Source #1 Title: Parasite Type of source: Movie Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment Date Published: 27 June 2019 Date Accessed: March 2021 Summary/What is it about The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life. Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else. Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made. Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism. Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #2 Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed Type of source: Blog Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed Date Published: September 2nd. 2019 Date Accessed: 16/06/21 Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers. Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ✔ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece. *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Source #3 Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist Type of source: Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist Date Published: September 19 2020 Date Accessed: 18 June 2021 Summary/What is it about This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man. Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it. *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #4 Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? Type of source: Blog Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? Date Published: 24 August 2020 Date Accessed: 22 June 2021 Summary/What is it about This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed. Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation. Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): 1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat. Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too. *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #5 Title: Type of source: Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: Date Published: Date Accessed: Summary/What is it about Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #6 Title: Type of source: Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: Date Published: Date Accessed: Summary/What is it about Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/ “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Inquiry Framing Topic: Capitalism What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name. How topic links to a studied text: Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’ Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society. Key questions: At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal 1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes 2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts 3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism Source #1 Title: Parasite Type of source: Movie Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment Date Published: 27 June 2019 Date Accessed: March 2021 Summary/What is it about The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life. Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else. Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made. Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism. Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #2 Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed Type of source: Blog Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed Date Published: September 2nd. 2019 Date Accessed: 16/06/21 Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers. Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ✔ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece. *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Source #3 Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist Type of source: Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist Date Published: September 19 2020 Date Accessed: 18 June 2021 Summary/What is it about This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man. Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it. *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #4 Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? Type of source: Blog Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? Date Published: 24 August 2020 Date Accessed: 22 June 2021 Summary/What is it about This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed. Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation. Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): 1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat. Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too. *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #5 Title: Type of source: Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: Date Published: Date Accessed: Summary/What is it about Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #6 Title: Type of source: Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: Date Published: Date Accessed: Summary/What is it about Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/ “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Inquiry Framing Topic: Capitalism What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name. How topic links to a studied text: Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’ Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society. Key questions: At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal 1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes 2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts 3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism Source #1 Title: Parasite Type of source: Movie Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment Date Published: 27 June 2019 Date Accessed: March 2021 Summary/What is it about The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life. Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else. Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made. Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism. Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #2 Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed Type of source: Blog Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed Date Published: September 2nd. 2019 Date Accessed: 16/06/21 Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers. Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ✔ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece. *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Source #3 Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist Type of source: Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist Date Published: September 19 2020 Date Accessed: 18 June 2021 Summary/What is it about This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man. Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it. *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #4 Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? Type of source: Blog Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? Date Published: 24 August 2020 Date Accessed: 22 June 2021 Summary/What is it about This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed. Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation. Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): 1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat. Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too. *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #5 Title: Type of source: Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: Date Published: Date Accessed: Summary/What is it about Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #6 Title: Type of source: Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: Date Published: Date Accessed: Summary/What is it about Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/ “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Inquiry Framing Topic: Capitalism What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name. How topic links to a studied text: Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’ Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society. Key questions: At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal 1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes 2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts 3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism Source #1 Title: Parasite Type of source: Movie Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment Date Published: 27 June 2019 Date Accessed: March 2021 Summary/What is it about The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life. Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else. Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made. Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism. Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #2 Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed Type of source: Blog Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed Date Published: September 2nd. 2019 Date Accessed: 16/06/21 Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers. Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ✔ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece. *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Source #3 Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist Type of source: Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist Date Published: September 19 2020 Date Accessed: 18 June 2021 Summary/What is it about This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man. Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it. *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #4 Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? Type of source: Blog Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? Date Published: 24 August 2020 Date Accessed: 22 June 2021 Summary/What is it about This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed. Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation. Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): 1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat. Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too. *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #5 Title: Type of source: Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: Date Published: Date Accessed: Summary/What is it about Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #6 Title: Type of source: Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: Date Published: Date Accessed: Summary/What is it about Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/ “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Inquiry Framing Topic: Capitalism What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name. How topic links to a studied text: Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’ Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society. Key questions: At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal 1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes 2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts 3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism Source #1 Title: Parasite Type of source: Movie Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment Date Published: 27 June 2019 Date Accessed: March 2021 Summary/What is it about The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life. Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else. Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made. Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism. Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #2 Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed Type of source: Blog Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed Date Published: September 2nd. 2019 Date Accessed: 16/06/21 Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers. Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ✔ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece. *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Source #3 Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist Type of source: Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist Date Published: September 19 2020 Date Accessed: 18 June 2021 Summary/What is it about This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man. Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it. *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #4 Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? Type of source: Blog Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? Date Published: 24 August 2020 Date Accessed: 22 June 2021 Summary/What is it about This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed. Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation. Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): 1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat. Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too. *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #5 Title: Type of source: Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: Date Published: Date Accessed: Summary/What is it about Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #6 Title: Type of source: Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: Date Published: Date Accessed: Summary/What is it about Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/ “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Inquiry Framing Topic: Capitalism What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name. How topic links to a studied text: Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’ Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society. Key questions: At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal 1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes 2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts 3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism Source #1 Title: Parasite Type of source: Movie Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment Date Published: 27 June 2019 Date Accessed: March 2021 Summary/What is it about The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life. Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else. Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made. Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism. Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #2 Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed Type of source: Blog Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed Date Published: September 2nd. 2019 Date Accessed: 16/06/21 Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers. Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ✔ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece. *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Source #3 Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist Type of source: Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist Date Published: September 19 2020 Date Accessed: 18 June 2021 Summary/What is it about This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man. Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it. *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #4 Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? Type of source: Blog Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? Date Published: 24 August 2020 Date Accessed: 22 June 2021 Summary/What is it about This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed. Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation. Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): 1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat. Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too. *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #5 Title: Type of source: Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: Date Published: Date Accessed: Summary/What is it about Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #6 Title: Type of source: Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: Date Published: Date Accessed: Summary/What is it about Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/ “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Inquiry Framing Topic: Capitalism What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name. How topic links to a studied text: Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’ Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society. Key questions: At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal 1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes 2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts 3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism Source #1 Title: Parasite Type of source: Movie Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment Date Published: 27 June 2019 Date Accessed: March 2021 Summary/What is it about The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life. Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else. Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made. Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism. Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #2 Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed Type of source: Blog Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed Date Published: September 2nd. 2019 Date Accessed: 16/06/21 Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers. Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ✔ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece. *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Source #3 Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist Type of source: Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist Date Published: September 19 2020 Date Accessed: 18 June 2021 Summary/What is it about This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man. Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it. *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #4 Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? Type of source: Blog Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? Date Published: 24 August 2020 Date Accessed: 22 June 2021 Summary/What is it about This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed. Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation. Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): 1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat. Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too. *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #5 Title: Type of source: Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: Date Published: Date Accessed: Summary/What is it about Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #6 Title: Type of source: Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: Date Published: Date Accessed: Summary/What is it about Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/ “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Inquiry Framing Topic: Capitalism What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name. How topic links to a studied text: Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’ Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society. Key questions: At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal 1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes 2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts 3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism Source #1 Title: Parasite Type of source: Movie Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment Date Published: 27 June 2019 Date Accessed: March 2021 Summary/What is it about The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life. Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else. Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made. Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism. Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #2 Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed Type of source: Blog Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed Date Published: September 2nd. 2019 Date Accessed: 16/06/21 Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers. Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ✔ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece. *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Source #3 Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist Type of source: Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist Date Published: September 19 2020 Date Accessed: 18 June 2021 Summary/What is it about This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man. Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it. *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #4 Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? Type of source: Blog Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? Date Published: 24 August 2020 Date Accessed: 22 June 2021 Summary/What is it about This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed. Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation. Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): 1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat. Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too. *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #5 Title: Type of source: Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: Date Published: Date Accessed: Summary/What is it about Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction texts “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because: Source #6 Title: Type of source: Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video URL or publication details: Date Published: Date Accessed: Summary/What is it about Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): Reliability: delete the table that does not apply Reliability: Non-fiction texts (Probably) More reliable (Probably) Less reliable (Possibly) Unreliable ☐ Recent publication date ☐ Older publication date ☐ No publication date ☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ☐ Has author’s name ☐No author ☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts ☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find ☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site ☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment ☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased ☐ Easy to find similar articles ☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article ☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate ☐ Site is poorly designed ☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR I believe this source is/is not reliable because: *check Wikipedia or this infographic. Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/ “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. I believe this source is/is not reliable because:'
Unified diff of changes made by edit (edit_diff)
'@@ -1,121 +1,3874 @@ -{{short description|System of rules to convert information into another form or representation}} -{{Other uses}} -{{Redirect|Encoding|other uses|Encoding (disambiguation)}} -{{For|[[Wikipedia:Naming conventions (technical restrictions)#Forbidden characters|technical reasons]], "Code#01 Bad Girl" and "Code#02 Pretty Pretty" redirect here. For the EPs by Ladies' Code|Code 01 Bad Girl|Code 02 Pretty Pretty}} -{{More citations needed|date=March 2010}} -In [[communication]]s and [[information processing]], '''code''' is a system of rules to convert [[information]]—such as a [[letter (alphabet)|letter]], [[word]], sound, image, or [[gesture]]—into another form, sometimes [[data compression|shortened]] or [[secrecy|secret]], for communication through a [[communication channel]] or storage in a [[storage medium]]. An early example is an invention of [[language]], which enabled a person, through [[speech]], to communicate what they thought, saw, heard, or felt to others. But speech limits the range of communication to the distance a voice can carry and limits the audience to those present when the speech is uttered. The invention of [[writing]], which converted spoken language into [[visual system|visual]] [[symbol]]s, extended the range of communication across space and [[time]]. +{{short description|System ofPHIC NUMERALS" + |publisher Inquiry Framing +Topic: Capitalism -The process of '''encoding''' converts information from a [[communication source|source]] into symbols for communication or storage. '''Decoding''' is the reverse process, converting code symbols back into a form that the recipient understands, such as English or/and Spanish. -One reason for coding is to enable communication in places where ordinary [[plain language]], spoken or written, is difficult or impossible. For example, [[semaphore]], where the configuration of [[Flag semaphore|flags]] held by a signaler or the arms of a [[semaphore line|semaphore tower]] encodes parts of the message, typically individual letters, and numbers. Another person standing a great distance away can interpret the flags and reproduce the words sent. +What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name. -== Theory == -{{main|Coding theory}} -In [[information theory]] and [[computer science]], a code is usually considered as an [[algorithm]] that uniquely represents [[symbols]] from some source [[alphabet (computer science)|alphabet]], by ''encoded'' strings, which may be in some other target alphabet. An extension of the code for representing sequences of symbols over the source alphabet is obtained by concatenating the encoded strings. -Before giving a mathematically precise definition, this is a brief example. The mapping -:<math>C = \{\, a\mapsto 0, b\mapsto 01, c\mapsto 011\,\}</math> -is a code, whose source alphabet is the set <math>\{a,b,c\}</math> and whose target alphabet is the set <math>\{0,1\}</math>. Using the extension of the code, the encoded string 0011001 can be grouped into codewords as 0 011 0 01, and these in turn can be decoded to the sequence of source symbols ''acab''. +How topic links to a studied text: +Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’ -Using terms from [[formal language theory]], the precise mathematical definition of this concept is as follows: let S and T be two finite sets, called the source and target [[alphabet (computer science)|alphabets]], respectively. A '''code''' <math>C:\, S \to T^*</math> is a [[total function]] mapping each symbol from S to a [[String (computer science)|sequence of symbols]] over T. The '''extension''' <math>C'</math> of <math>C</math>, is a [[Homomorphism#Homomorphisms and e-free homomorphisms in formal language theory|homomorphism]] of <math>S^*</math> into <math>T^*</math>, which naturally maps each sequence of source symbols to a sequence of target symbols. -=== Variable-length codes === -{{main|Variable-length code}} -In this section, we consider codes that encode each source (clear text) character by a [[code word]] from some dictionary, and [[concatenation]] of such code words give us an encoded string. Variable-length codes are especially useful when clear text characters have different probabilities; see also [[entropy encoding]]. +Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society. -A ''prefix code'' is a code with the "prefix property": there is no valid code word in the system that is a [[prefix (computer science)|prefix]] (start) of any other valid code word in the set. [[Huffman coding]] is the most known algorithm for deriving prefix codes. Prefix codes are widely referred to as "Huffman codes" even when the code was not produced by a Huffman algorithm. Other examples of prefix codes are [[country calling codes]], the country and publisher parts of [[ISBN]]s, and the Secondary Synchronization Codes used in the [[UMTS]] [[W-CDMA|WCDMA]] 3G Wireless Standard. -[[Kraft's inequality]] characterizes the sets of codeword lengths that are possible in a prefix code. Virtually any uniquely decodable one-to-many code, not necessarily a prefix one, must satisfy Kraft's inequality. +Key questions: +At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal +1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes +2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts +3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism -=== Error-correcting codes === -{{main|Error detection and correction}} -{{see also|Block code}} -Codes may also be used to represent data in a way more resistant to errors in transmission or storage. This so-called [[Error detection and correction|error-correcting code]] works by including carefully crafted redundancy with the stored (or transmitted) data. Examples include [[Hamming code]]s, [[Reed–Solomon]], [[Reed–Muller code|Reed–Muller]], [[Walsh–Hadamard code|Walsh–Hadamard]], [[BCH code|Bose–Chaudhuri–Hochquenghem]], [[Turbo code|Turbo]], [[Binary Golay code|Golay]], [[Goppa code|Goppa]], [[low-density parity-check code]]s, and [[space–time code]]s. -Error detecting codes can be optimised to detect ''burst errors'', or ''random errors''. -== Examples == -=== Codes in communication used for brevity === -A cable code replaces words (e.g. ''ship'' or ''invoice'') with shorter words, allowing the same information to be sent with fewer [[character (computing)|characters]], more quickly, and less expensively. -Codes can be used for brevity. When [[Telegraphy|telegraph]] messages were the state of the art in rapid long-distance communication, elaborate systems of [[commercial code (communications)|commercial codes]] that encoded complete phrases into single mouths (commonly five-minute groups) were developed, so that telegraphers became conversant with such "words" as ''BYOXO'' ("Are you trying to weasel out of our deal?"), ''LIOUY'' ("Why do you not answer my question?"), ''BMULD'' ("You're a skunk!"), or ''AYYLU'' ("Not clearly coded, repeat more clearly."). [[Code word]]s were chosen for various reasons: [[length]], [[pronounceability]], etc. Meanings were chosen to fit perceived needs: commercial negotiations, military terms for military codes, diplomatic terms for diplomatic codes, any and all of the preceding for espionage codes. Codebooks and codebook publishers proliferated, including one run as a front for the American [[Black Chamber]] run by [[Herbert Yardley]] between the First and Second World Wars. The purpose of most of these codes was to save on cable costs. The use of data coding for [[data compression]] predates the computer era; an early example is the telegraph [[Morse code]] where more-frequently used characters have shorter representations. Techniques such as [[Huffman coding]] are now used by computer-based [[algorithm]]s to compress large data files into a more compact form for storage or transmission. -=== Character encodings === -{{Main|Character encoding}} -Character encodings are representations of textual data. A given character encoding may be associated with a specific character set (the collection of characters which it can represent), though some character sets have multiple character encodings and vice versa. Character encodings may be broadly grouped according to the number of bytes required to represent a single character: there are single-byte encodings, [[Wide character|multibyte]] (also called wide) encodings, and [[Variable-width encoding|variable-width]] (also called variable-length) encodings. The earliest character encodings were single-byte, the best-known example of which is [[ASCII]]. ASCII remains in use today, for example in [[HTTP headers]]. However, single-byte encodings cannot model character sets with more than 256 characters. Scripts that require large character sets such as [[CJK|Chinese, Japanese and Korean]] must be represented with multibyte encodings. Early multibyte encodings were fixed-length, meaning that although each character was represented by more than one byte, all characters used the same number of bytes ("word length"), making them suitable for decoding with a lookup table. The final group, variable-width encodings, is a subset of multibyte encodings. These use more complex encoding and decoding logic to efficiently represent large character sets while keeping the representations of more commonly used characters shorter or maintaining backward compatibility properties. This group includes [[UTF-8]], an encoding of the [[Unicode]] character set; UTF-8 is the most common encoding of text media on the Internet. +Source #1 +Title: Parasite +Type of source: Movie +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment +Date Published: 27 June 2019 +Date Accessed: March 2021 +Summary/What is it about +The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life. -=== Genetic code === -{{Main|Genetic code}} -[[Biology|Biological]] organisms contain genetic material that is used to control their function and development. This is [[DNA]], which contains units named [[gene]]s from which [[messenger RNA]] is derived. This in turn produces [[protein]]s through a [[genetic code]] in which a series of triplets ([[codon]]s) of four possible [[nucleotides]] can be translated into one of twenty possible [[amino acid]]s. A sequence of codons results in a corresponding sequence of amino acids that form a protein molecule; a type of codon called a [[stop codon]] signals the end of the sequence. -===Gödel code=== -In [[mathematics]], a [[Gödel code]] was the basis for the proof of [[Gödel]]'s [[incompleteness theorem]]. Here, the idea was to map [[mathematical notation]] to a [[natural number]] (using a [[Gödel numbering]]). -=== Other === -There are codes using colors, like [[traffic lights]], the [[Electronic color code|color code]] employed to mark the nominal value of the [[Resistor|electrical resistor]]s or that of the trashcans devoted to specific types of garbage (paper, glass, organic, etc.). +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else. -In [[marketing]], [[coupon]] codes can be used for a financial discount or rebate when purchasing a product from a (usual internet) retailer. -In military environments, specific sounds with the [[cornet]] are used for different uses: to mark some moments of the day, to command the infantry on the battlefield, etc. +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made. -Communication systems for sensory impairments, such as [[sign language]] for deaf people and [[braille]] for blind people, are based on movement or tactile codes. -[[Sheet music|Musical scores]] are the most common way to encode [[music]]. -Specific games have their own code systems to record the matches, e.g. [[chess notation]]. +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): +There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism. -=== Cryptography === -In the [[history of cryptography]], [[Code (cryptography)|codes]] were once common for ensuring the confidentiality of communications, although [[cipher]]s are now used instead. -Secret codes intended to obscure the real messages, ranging from serious (mainly [[espionage]] in military, diplomacy, business, etc.) to trivial (romance, games) can be any kind of imaginative encoding: [[Language of flowers|flowers]], game cards, clothes, fans, hats, melodies, birds, etc., in which the sole requirement is the pre-agreement on the meaning by both the sender and the receiver. -== Other examples == -Other examples of encoding include: -*Encoding (in [[cognition]]) - a basic perceptual process of interpreting incoming stimuli; technically speaking, it is a complex, multi-stage process of converting relatively objective sensory input (e.g., light, sound) into a subjectively meaningful experience. -*A [[content format]] - a specific encoding format for converting a specific type of [[data]] to [[information]]. -*Text encoding uses a [[markup language]] to tag the structure and other features of a text to facilitate processing by computers. (See also [[Text Encoding Initiative]].) -*[[Semantics encoding]] of formal language A informal language B is a method of representing all terms (e.g. programs or descriptions) of language A using language B. -*[[Data compression]] transforms a signal into a code optimized for [[Transmission (telecommunications)|transmission]] or [[data storage device|storage]], generally done with a [[codec]]. -*[[Neural encoding]] - the way in which information is represented in [[neuron]]s. -*[[Memory encoding]] - the process of converting sensations into memories. -*[[Television encoding]]: [[NTSC]], [[PAL]] and [[SECAM]] -Other examples of decoding include: -* [[Parsing|Decoding (computer science)]] -* [[Decoding methods]], methods in communication theory for decoding codewords sent over a noisy channel -* [[Digital signal processing]], the study of signals in a digital representation and the processing methods of these signals -* [[Digital-to-analog converter]], the use of analog circuit for decoding operations -* Word decoding, the use of [[phonics]] to decipher print patterns and translate them into the sounds of language +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply -==Codes and acronyms== -[[Acronym]]s and abbreviations can be considered codes, and in a sense, all [[language]]s and [[writing system]]s are codes for human thought. +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. +My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families -[[International Air Transport Association airport code]]s are three-letter codes used to designate airports and used for [[bag tag]]s. [[Station code]]s are similarly used on railways but are usually national, so the same code can be used for different stations if they are in different countries. +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: -Occasionally, a code word achieves an independent existence (and meaning) while the original equivalent phrase is forgotten or at least no longer has the precise meaning attributed to the code word. For example, '30' was widely used in [[journalism]] to mean "end of story", and has been used in [[-30-|other contexts]] to signify "the end".<ref>Kogan, Hadass [http://www.ajr.org/Article.asp?id=4408 "So Why Not 29"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101212101705/http://ajr.org/Article.asp?id=4408 |date=2010-12-12 }} American Journalism Review. Retrieved 2012-07-03.</ref> -<ref>{{cite web - |title = WESTERN UNION "92 CODE" & WOOD'S "TELEGRAPHIC NUMERALS" - |publisher = Signal Corps Association - |year = 1996 - |url = http://www.civilwarsignals.org/pages/tele/wurules1866/92code.html - |access-date = 2012-07-03 - |url-status = live - |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120509135118/http://www.civilwarsignals.org/pages/tele/wurules1866/92code.html - |archive-date = 2012-05-09 -}}</ref> -== See also == -{{Commons category|Codes}} -* [[Asemic writing]] -* [[Cipher]] -* [[Code (semiotics)]] -* [[Equipment codes]] -* [[Quantum error correction]] -* [[Semiotics]] -* [[Universal language]] -== References == -{{reflist}} -* {{cite journal |last1=Chevance |first1=Fabienne |title=Case for the genetic code as a triplet of triplets |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America |volume=114 |issue=18 |pages=4745–4750 |pmc=5422812 |year=2017 |pmid=28416671 |doi=10.1073/pnas.1614896114 }} -[[Category:Encodings]] -[[Category:Signal processing]] + + + + +Source #2 +Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed + + +Type of source: Blog +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed +Date Published: September 2nd. 2019 +Date Accessed: 16/06/21 +Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers. + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts + +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +✔ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: +I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece. + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. + + + + + + + + + + +Source #3 +Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist + + +Type of source: +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist +Date Published: September 19 2020 +Date Accessed: 18 June 2021 +Summary/What is it about +This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man. + + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it. + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Source #4 +Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? + + + +Type of source: Blog +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? +Date Published: 24 August 2020 +Date Accessed: 22 June 2021 +Summary/What is it about +This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed. + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation. + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + +1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat. + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too. + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Source #5 +Title: + + +Type of source: +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: +Date Published: +Date Accessed: +Summary/What is it about + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Source #6 +Title: +Type of source: +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: +Date Published: +Date Accessed: +Summary/What is it about + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/ +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Inquiry Framing +Topic: Capitalism + + +What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name. + + +How topic links to a studied text: +Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’ + + +Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society. + + +Key questions: +At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal +1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes +2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts +3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism + + + + +Source #1 +Title: Parasite +Type of source: Movie +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment +Date Published: 27 June 2019 +Date Accessed: March 2021 +Summary/What is it about +The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life. + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else. + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made. + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): +There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism. + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. +My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + + +Source #2 +Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed + + +Type of source: Blog +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed +Date Published: September 2nd. 2019 +Date Accessed: 16/06/21 +Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers. + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts + +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +✔ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: +I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece. + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. + + + + + + + + + + +Source #3 +Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist + + +Type of source: +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist +Date Published: September 19 2020 +Date Accessed: 18 June 2021 +Summary/What is it about +This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man. + + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it. + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Source #4 +Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? + + + +Type of source: Blog +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? +Date Published: 24 August 2020 +Date Accessed: 22 June 2021 +Summary/What is it about +This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed. + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation. + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + +1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat. + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too. + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Source #5 +Title: + + +Type of source: +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: +Date Published: +Date Accessed: +Summary/What is it about + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Source #6 +Title: +Type of source: +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: +Date Published: +Date Accessed: +Summary/What is it about + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/ +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Inquiry Framing +Topic: Capitalism + + +What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name. + + +How topic links to a studied text: +Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’ + + +Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society. + + +Key questions: +At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal +1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes +2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts +3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism + + + + +Source #1 +Title: Parasite +Type of source: Movie +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment +Date Published: 27 June 2019 +Date Accessed: March 2021 +Summary/What is it about +The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life. + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else. + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made. + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): +There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism. + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. +My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + + +Source #2 +Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed + + +Type of source: Blog +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed +Date Published: September 2nd. 2019 +Date Accessed: 16/06/21 +Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers. + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts + +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +✔ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: +I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece. + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. + + + + + + + + + + +Source #3 +Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist + + +Type of source: +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist +Date Published: September 19 2020 +Date Accessed: 18 June 2021 +Summary/What is it about +This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man. + + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it. + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Source #4 +Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? + + + +Type of source: Blog +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? +Date Published: 24 August 2020 +Date Accessed: 22 June 2021 +Summary/What is it about +This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed. + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation. + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + +1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat. + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too. + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Source #5 +Title: + + +Type of source: +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: +Date Published: +Date Accessed: +Summary/What is it about + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Source #6 +Title: +Type of source: +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: +Date Published: +Date Accessed: +Summary/What is it about + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/ +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Inquiry Framing +Topic: Capitalism + + +What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name. + + +How topic links to a studied text: +Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’ + + +Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society. + + +Key questions: +At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal +1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes +2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts +3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism + + + + +Source #1 +Title: Parasite +Type of source: Movie +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment +Date Published: 27 June 2019 +Date Accessed: March 2021 +Summary/What is it about +The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life. + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else. + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made. + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): +There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism. + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. +My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + + +Source #2 +Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed + + +Type of source: Blog +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed +Date Published: September 2nd. 2019 +Date Accessed: 16/06/21 +Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers. + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts + +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +✔ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: +I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece. + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. + + + + + + + + + + +Source #3 +Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist + + +Type of source: +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist +Date Published: September 19 2020 +Date Accessed: 18 June 2021 +Summary/What is it about +This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man. + + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it. + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Source #4 +Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? + + + +Type of source: Blog +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? +Date Published: 24 August 2020 +Date Accessed: 22 June 2021 +Summary/What is it about +This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed. + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation. + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + +1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat. + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too. + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Source #5 +Title: + + +Type of source: +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: +Date Published: +Date Accessed: +Summary/What is it about + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Source #6 +Title: +Type of source: +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: +Date Published: +Date Accessed: +Summary/What is it about + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/ +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Inquiry Framing +Topic: Capitalism + + +What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name. + + +How topic links to a studied text: +Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’ + + +Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society. + + +Key questions: +At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal +1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes +2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts +3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism + + + + +Source #1 +Title: Parasite +Type of source: Movie +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment +Date Published: 27 June 2019 +Date Accessed: March 2021 +Summary/What is it about +The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life. + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else. + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made. + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): +There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism. + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. +My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + + +Source #2 +Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed + + +Type of source: Blog +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed +Date Published: September 2nd. 2019 +Date Accessed: 16/06/21 +Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers. + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts + +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +✔ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: +I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece. + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. + + + + + + + + + + +Source #3 +Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist + + +Type of source: +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist +Date Published: September 19 2020 +Date Accessed: 18 June 2021 +Summary/What is it about +This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man. + + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it. + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Source #4 +Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? + + + +Type of source: Blog +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? +Date Published: 24 August 2020 +Date Accessed: 22 June 2021 +Summary/What is it about +This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed. + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation. + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + +1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat. + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too. + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Source #5 +Title: + + +Type of source: +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: +Date Published: +Date Accessed: +Summary/What is it about + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Source #6 +Title: +Type of source: +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: +Date Published: +Date Accessed: +Summary/What is it about + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/ +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Inquiry Framing +Topic: Capitalism + + +What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name. + + +How topic links to a studied text: +Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’ + + +Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society. + + +Key questions: +At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal +1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes +2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts +3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism + + + + +Source #1 +Title: Parasite +Type of source: Movie +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment +Date Published: 27 June 2019 +Date Accessed: March 2021 +Summary/What is it about +The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life. + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else. + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made. + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): +There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism. + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. +My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + + +Source #2 +Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed + + +Type of source: Blog +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed +Date Published: September 2nd. 2019 +Date Accessed: 16/06/21 +Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers. + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts + +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +✔ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: +I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece. + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. + + + + + + + + + + +Source #3 +Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist + + +Type of source: +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist +Date Published: September 19 2020 +Date Accessed: 18 June 2021 +Summary/What is it about +This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man. + + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it. + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Source #4 +Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? + + + +Type of source: Blog +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? +Date Published: 24 August 2020 +Date Accessed: 22 June 2021 +Summary/What is it about +This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed. + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation. + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + +1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat. + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too. + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Source #5 +Title: + + +Type of source: +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: +Date Published: +Date Accessed: +Summary/What is it about + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Source #6 +Title: +Type of source: +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: +Date Published: +Date Accessed: +Summary/What is it about + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/ +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Inquiry Framing +Topic: Capitalism + + +What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name. + + +How topic links to a studied text: +Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’ + + +Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society. + + +Key questions: +At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal +1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes +2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts +3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism + + + + +Source #1 +Title: Parasite +Type of source: Movie +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment +Date Published: 27 June 2019 +Date Accessed: March 2021 +Summary/What is it about +The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life. + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else. + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made. + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): +There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism. + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. +My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + + +Source #2 +Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed + + +Type of source: Blog +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed +Date Published: September 2nd. 2019 +Date Accessed: 16/06/21 +Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers. + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts + +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +✔ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: +I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece. + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. + + + + + + + + + + +Source #3 +Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist + + +Type of source: +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist +Date Published: September 19 2020 +Date Accessed: 18 June 2021 +Summary/What is it about +This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man. + + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it. + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Source #4 +Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? + + + +Type of source: Blog +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? +Date Published: 24 August 2020 +Date Accessed: 22 June 2021 +Summary/What is it about +This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed. + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation. + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + +1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat. + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too. + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Source #5 +Title: + + +Type of source: +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: +Date Published: +Date Accessed: +Summary/What is it about + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Source #6 +Title: +Type of source: +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: +Date Published: +Date Accessed: +Summary/What is it about + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/ +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Inquiry Framing +Topic: Capitalism + + +What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name. + + +How topic links to a studied text: +Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’ + + +Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society. + + +Key questions: +At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal +1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes +2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts +3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism + + + + +Source #1 +Title: Parasite +Type of source: Movie +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment +Date Published: 27 June 2019 +Date Accessed: March 2021 +Summary/What is it about +The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life. + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else. + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made. + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): +There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism. + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. +My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + + +Source #2 +Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed + + +Type of source: Blog +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed +Date Published: September 2nd. 2019 +Date Accessed: 16/06/21 +Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers. + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts + +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +✔ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: +I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece. + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. + + + + + + + + + + +Source #3 +Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist + + +Type of source: +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist +Date Published: September 19 2020 +Date Accessed: 18 June 2021 +Summary/What is it about +This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man. + + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it. + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Source #4 +Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? + + + +Type of source: Blog +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives? +Date Published: 24 August 2020 +Date Accessed: 22 June 2021 +Summary/What is it about +This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? +This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed. + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? +It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation. + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + +1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat. + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too. + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Source #5 +Title: + + +Type of source: +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: +Date Published: +Date Accessed: +Summary/What is it about + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction texts +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + + + +Source #6 +Title: +Type of source: +Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video +URL or publication details: +Date Published: +Date Accessed: +Summary/What is it about + + + +Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic? + + + +Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? + + + +Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): + + + + + +Reliability: delete the table that does not apply + +Reliability: Non-fiction texts +(Probably) More reliable +(Probably) Less reliable +(Possibly) Unreliable +☐ Recent publication date +☐ Older publication date +☐ No publication date +☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) +☐ Has author’s name +☐No author +☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts +☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find +☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references +☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site + + +☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment +☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased +☐ Easy to find similar articles + + + + +☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article +☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate + + +☐ Site is poorly designed +☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR + + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: + + + + + +*check Wikipedia or this infographic. +Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/ +“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created. + + + +I believe this source is/is not reliable because: '
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[ 0 => '{{short description|System ofPHIC NUMERALS"', 1 => ' |publisher Inquiry Framing ', 2 => 'Topic: Capitalism', 3 => 'What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name.', 4 => 'How topic links to a studied text:', 5 => 'Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’', 6 => 'Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society.', 7 => 'Key questions: ', 8 => 'At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal ', 9 => '1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes', 10 => '2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts', 11 => '3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism ', 12 => 'Source #1', 13 => 'Title: Parasite', 14 => 'Type of source: Movie', 15 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 16 => 'URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment', 17 => 'Date Published: 27 June 2019', 18 => 'Date Accessed: March 2021', 19 => 'Summary/What is it about', 20 => 'The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life.', 21 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 22 => 'This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else.', 23 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 24 => 'This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made. ', 25 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 26 => 'There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism.', 27 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 28 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 29 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 30 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 31 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 32 => 'My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families ', 33 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 34 => '', 35 => '', 36 => '', 37 => '', 38 => 'Source #2', 39 => 'Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed', 40 => '', 41 => '', 42 => 'Type of source: Blog', 43 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 44 => 'URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed ', 45 => 'Date Published: September 2nd. 2019', 46 => 'Date Accessed: 16/06/21', 47 => 'Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers.', 48 => '', 49 => '', 50 => '', 51 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 52 => 'This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society ', 53 => '', 54 => '', 55 => '', 56 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? ', 57 => 'It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation ', 58 => '', 59 => '', 60 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):', 61 => '', 62 => '', 63 => '', 64 => '', 65 => '', 66 => '', 67 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 68 => '', 69 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 70 => '', 71 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 72 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 73 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 74 => '✔ Recent publication date ', 75 => '☐ Older publication date ', 76 => '☐ No publication date ', 77 => '✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 78 => '☐ Has author’s name', 79 => '☐No author', 80 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 81 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 82 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 83 => '✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 84 => '', 85 => '', 86 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 87 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 88 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 89 => '', 90 => '', 91 => '', 92 => '', 93 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 94 => '✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 95 => '', 96 => '', 97 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 98 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 99 => '', 100 => '', 101 => '', 102 => '', 103 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 104 => 'I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece.', 105 => '', 106 => '', 107 => '', 108 => '', 109 => '', 110 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 111 => '', 112 => '', 113 => '', 114 => '', 115 => '', 116 => '', 117 => '', 118 => '', 119 => '', 120 => '', 121 => 'Source #3', 122 => 'Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist', 123 => '', 124 => '', 125 => 'Type of source: ', 126 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 127 => 'URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist ', 128 => 'Date Published: September 19 2020', 129 => 'Date Accessed: 18 June 2021', 130 => 'Summary/What is it about', 131 => 'This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man.', 132 => '', 133 => '', 134 => '', 135 => '', 136 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 137 => 'This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society', 138 => '', 139 => '', 140 => '', 141 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 142 => 'This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big ', 143 => '', 144 => '', 145 => '', 146 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 147 => '', 148 => '', 149 => '', 150 => '', 151 => '', 152 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 153 => '', 154 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 155 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 156 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 157 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 158 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 159 => '☐ Older publication date ', 160 => '☐ No publication date ', 161 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 162 => '☐ Has author’s name', 163 => '☐No author', 164 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 165 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 166 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 167 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 168 => '', 169 => '', 170 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 171 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 172 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 173 => '', 174 => '', 175 => '', 176 => '', 177 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 178 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 179 => '', 180 => '', 181 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 182 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 183 => '', 184 => '', 185 => '', 186 => '', 187 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it.', 188 => '', 189 => '', 190 => '', 191 => '', 192 => '', 193 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 194 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 195 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 196 => '', 197 => '', 198 => '', 199 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 200 => '', 201 => '', 202 => '', 203 => '', 204 => '', 205 => '', 206 => '', 207 => 'Source #4', 208 => 'Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?', 209 => '', 210 => '', 211 => '', 212 => 'Type of source: Blog', 213 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 214 => 'URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?', 215 => 'Date Published: 24 August 2020', 216 => 'Date Accessed: 22 June 2021', 217 => 'Summary/What is it about', 218 => 'This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning', 219 => '', 220 => '', 221 => '', 222 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 223 => 'This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed.', 224 => '', 225 => '', 226 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? ', 227 => 'It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation.', 228 => '', 229 => '', 230 => '', 231 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 232 => '', 233 => '1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat.', 234 => '', 235 => '', 236 => '', 237 => '', 238 => '', 239 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 240 => '', 241 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 242 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 243 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 244 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 245 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 246 => '☐ Older publication date ', 247 => '☐ No publication date ', 248 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 249 => '☐ Has author’s name', 250 => '☐No author', 251 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 252 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 253 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 254 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 255 => '', 256 => '', 257 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 258 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 259 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 260 => '', 261 => '', 262 => '', 263 => '', 264 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 265 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 266 => '', 267 => '', 268 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 269 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 270 => '', 271 => '', 272 => '', 273 => '', 274 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too.', 275 => '', 276 => '', 277 => '', 278 => '', 279 => '', 280 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 281 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 282 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 283 => '', 284 => '', 285 => '', 286 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 287 => '', 288 => '', 289 => '', 290 => '', 291 => '', 292 => '', 293 => '', 294 => 'Source #5', 295 => 'Title: ', 296 => '', 297 => '', 298 => 'Type of source: ', 299 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 300 => 'URL or publication details: ', 301 => 'Date Published: ', 302 => 'Date Accessed: ', 303 => 'Summary/What is it about', 304 => '', 305 => '', 306 => '', 307 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 308 => '', 309 => '', 310 => '', 311 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 312 => '', 313 => '', 314 => '', 315 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 316 => '', 317 => '', 318 => '', 319 => '', 320 => '', 321 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 322 => '', 323 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 324 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 325 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 326 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 327 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 328 => '☐ Older publication date ', 329 => '☐ No publication date ', 330 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 331 => '☐ Has author’s name', 332 => '☐No author', 333 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 334 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 335 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 336 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 337 => '', 338 => '', 339 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 340 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 341 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 342 => '', 343 => '', 344 => '', 345 => '', 346 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 347 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 348 => '', 349 => '', 350 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 351 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 352 => '', 353 => '', 354 => '', 355 => '', 356 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 357 => '', 358 => '', 359 => '', 360 => '', 361 => '', 362 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 363 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 364 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 365 => '', 366 => '', 367 => '', 368 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 369 => '', 370 => '', 371 => '', 372 => '', 373 => '', 374 => '', 375 => '', 376 => 'Source #6', 377 => 'Title: ', 378 => 'Type of source: ', 379 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 380 => 'URL or publication details: ', 381 => 'Date Published: ', 382 => 'Date Accessed: ', 383 => 'Summary/What is it about', 384 => '', 385 => '', 386 => '', 387 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 388 => '', 389 => '', 390 => '', 391 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 392 => '', 393 => '', 394 => '', 395 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 396 => '', 397 => '', 398 => '', 399 => '', 400 => '', 401 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 402 => '', 403 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 404 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 405 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 406 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 407 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 408 => '☐ Older publication date ', 409 => '☐ No publication date ', 410 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 411 => '☐ Has author’s name', 412 => '☐No author', 413 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 414 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 415 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 416 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 417 => '', 418 => '', 419 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 420 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 421 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 422 => '', 423 => '', 424 => '', 425 => '', 426 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 427 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 428 => '', 429 => '', 430 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 431 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 432 => '', 433 => '', 434 => '', 435 => '', 436 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 437 => '', 438 => '', 439 => '', 440 => '', 441 => '', 442 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 443 => 'Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/', 444 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 445 => '', 446 => '', 447 => '', 448 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 449 => '', 450 => '', 451 => '', 452 => '', 453 => '', 454 => '', 455 => '', 456 => 'Inquiry Framing ', 457 => 'Topic: Capitalism', 458 => '', 459 => '', 460 => 'What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name.', 461 => '', 462 => '', 463 => 'How topic links to a studied text:', 464 => 'Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’', 465 => '', 466 => '', 467 => 'Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society.', 468 => '', 469 => '', 470 => 'Key questions: ', 471 => 'At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal ', 472 => '1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes', 473 => '2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts', 474 => '3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism ', 475 => '', 476 => '', 477 => '', 478 => '', 479 => 'Source #1', 480 => 'Title: Parasite', 481 => 'Type of source: Movie', 482 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 483 => 'URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment', 484 => 'Date Published: 27 June 2019', 485 => 'Date Accessed: March 2021', 486 => 'Summary/What is it about', 487 => 'The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life.', 488 => '', 489 => '', 490 => '', 491 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 492 => 'This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else.', 493 => '', 494 => '', 495 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 496 => 'This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made. ', 497 => '', 498 => '', 499 => '', 500 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 501 => 'There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism.', 502 => '', 503 => '', 504 => '', 505 => '', 506 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 507 => '', 508 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 509 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 510 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 511 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 512 => 'My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families ', 513 => '', 514 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 515 => '', 516 => '', 517 => '', 518 => '', 519 => '', 520 => '', 521 => '', 522 => '', 523 => 'Source #2', 524 => 'Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed', 525 => '', 526 => '', 527 => 'Type of source: Blog', 528 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 529 => 'URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed ', 530 => 'Date Published: September 2nd. 2019', 531 => 'Date Accessed: 16/06/21', 532 => 'Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers.', 533 => '', 534 => '', 535 => '', 536 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 537 => 'This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society ', 538 => '', 539 => '', 540 => '', 541 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? ', 542 => 'It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation ', 543 => '', 544 => '', 545 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):', 546 => '', 547 => '', 548 => '', 549 => '', 550 => '', 551 => '', 552 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 553 => '', 554 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 555 => '', 556 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 557 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 558 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 559 => '✔ Recent publication date ', 560 => '☐ Older publication date ', 561 => '☐ No publication date ', 562 => '✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 563 => '☐ Has author’s name', 564 => '☐No author', 565 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 566 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 567 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 568 => '✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 569 => '', 570 => '', 571 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 572 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 573 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 574 => '', 575 => '', 576 => '', 577 => '', 578 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 579 => '✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 580 => '', 581 => '', 582 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 583 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 584 => '', 585 => '', 586 => '', 587 => '', 588 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 589 => 'I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece.', 590 => '', 591 => '', 592 => '', 593 => '', 594 => '', 595 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 596 => '', 597 => '', 598 => '', 599 => '', 600 => '', 601 => '', 602 => '', 603 => '', 604 => '', 605 => '', 606 => 'Source #3', 607 => 'Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist', 608 => '', 609 => '', 610 => 'Type of source: ', 611 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 612 => 'URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist ', 613 => 'Date Published: September 19 2020', 614 => 'Date Accessed: 18 June 2021', 615 => 'Summary/What is it about', 616 => 'This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man.', 617 => '', 618 => '', 619 => '', 620 => '', 621 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 622 => 'This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society', 623 => '', 624 => '', 625 => '', 626 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 627 => 'This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big ', 628 => '', 629 => '', 630 => '', 631 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 632 => '', 633 => '', 634 => '', 635 => '', 636 => '', 637 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 638 => '', 639 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 640 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 641 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 642 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 643 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 644 => '☐ Older publication date ', 645 => '☐ No publication date ', 646 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 647 => '☐ Has author’s name', 648 => '☐No author', 649 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 650 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 651 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 652 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 653 => '', 654 => '', 655 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 656 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 657 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 658 => '', 659 => '', 660 => '', 661 => '', 662 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 663 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 664 => '', 665 => '', 666 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 667 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 668 => '', 669 => '', 670 => '', 671 => '', 672 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it.', 673 => '', 674 => '', 675 => '', 676 => '', 677 => '', 678 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 679 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 680 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 681 => '', 682 => '', 683 => '', 684 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 685 => '', 686 => '', 687 => '', 688 => '', 689 => '', 690 => '', 691 => '', 692 => 'Source #4', 693 => 'Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?', 694 => '', 695 => '', 696 => '', 697 => 'Type of source: Blog', 698 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 699 => 'URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?', 700 => 'Date Published: 24 August 2020', 701 => 'Date Accessed: 22 June 2021', 702 => 'Summary/What is it about', 703 => 'This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning', 704 => '', 705 => '', 706 => '', 707 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 708 => 'This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed.', 709 => '', 710 => '', 711 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? ', 712 => 'It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation.', 713 => '', 714 => '', 715 => '', 716 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 717 => '', 718 => '1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat.', 719 => '', 720 => '', 721 => '', 722 => '', 723 => '', 724 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 725 => '', 726 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 727 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 728 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 729 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 730 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 731 => '☐ Older publication date ', 732 => '☐ No publication date ', 733 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 734 => '☐ Has author’s name', 735 => '☐No author', 736 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 737 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 738 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 739 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 740 => '', 741 => '', 742 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 743 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 744 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 745 => '', 746 => '', 747 => '', 748 => '', 749 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 750 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 751 => '', 752 => '', 753 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 754 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 755 => '', 756 => '', 757 => '', 758 => '', 759 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too.', 760 => '', 761 => '', 762 => '', 763 => '', 764 => '', 765 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 766 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 767 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 768 => '', 769 => '', 770 => '', 771 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 772 => '', 773 => '', 774 => '', 775 => '', 776 => '', 777 => '', 778 => '', 779 => 'Source #5', 780 => 'Title: ', 781 => '', 782 => '', 783 => 'Type of source: ', 784 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 785 => 'URL or publication details: ', 786 => 'Date Published: ', 787 => 'Date Accessed: ', 788 => 'Summary/What is it about', 789 => '', 790 => '', 791 => '', 792 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 793 => '', 794 => '', 795 => '', 796 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 797 => '', 798 => '', 799 => '', 800 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 801 => '', 802 => '', 803 => '', 804 => '', 805 => '', 806 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 807 => '', 808 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 809 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 810 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 811 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 812 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 813 => '☐ Older publication date ', 814 => '☐ No publication date ', 815 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 816 => '☐ Has author’s name', 817 => '☐No author', 818 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 819 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 820 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 821 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 822 => '', 823 => '', 824 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 825 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 826 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 827 => '', 828 => '', 829 => '', 830 => '', 831 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 832 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 833 => '', 834 => '', 835 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 836 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 837 => '', 838 => '', 839 => '', 840 => '', 841 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 842 => '', 843 => '', 844 => '', 845 => '', 846 => '', 847 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 848 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 849 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 850 => '', 851 => '', 852 => '', 853 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 854 => '', 855 => '', 856 => '', 857 => '', 858 => '', 859 => '', 860 => '', 861 => 'Source #6', 862 => 'Title: ', 863 => 'Type of source: ', 864 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 865 => 'URL or publication details: ', 866 => 'Date Published: ', 867 => 'Date Accessed: ', 868 => 'Summary/What is it about', 869 => '', 870 => '', 871 => '', 872 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 873 => '', 874 => '', 875 => '', 876 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 877 => '', 878 => '', 879 => '', 880 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 881 => '', 882 => '', 883 => '', 884 => '', 885 => '', 886 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 887 => '', 888 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 889 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 890 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 891 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 892 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 893 => '☐ Older publication date ', 894 => '☐ No publication date ', 895 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 896 => '☐ Has author’s name', 897 => '☐No author', 898 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 899 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 900 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 901 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 902 => '', 903 => '', 904 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 905 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 906 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 907 => '', 908 => '', 909 => '', 910 => '', 911 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 912 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 913 => '', 914 => '', 915 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 916 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 917 => '', 918 => '', 919 => '', 920 => '', 921 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 922 => '', 923 => '', 924 => '', 925 => '', 926 => '', 927 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 928 => 'Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/', 929 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 930 => '', 931 => '', 932 => '', 933 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 934 => '', 935 => '', 936 => '', 937 => '', 938 => '', 939 => '', 940 => '', 941 => 'Inquiry Framing ', 942 => 'Topic: Capitalism', 943 => '', 944 => '', 945 => 'What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name.', 946 => '', 947 => '', 948 => 'How topic links to a studied text:', 949 => 'Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’', 950 => '', 951 => '', 952 => 'Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society.', 953 => '', 954 => '', 955 => 'Key questions: ', 956 => 'At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal ', 957 => '1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes', 958 => '2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts', 959 => '3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism ', 960 => '', 961 => '', 962 => '', 963 => '', 964 => 'Source #1', 965 => 'Title: Parasite', 966 => 'Type of source: Movie', 967 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 968 => 'URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment', 969 => 'Date Published: 27 June 2019', 970 => 'Date Accessed: March 2021', 971 => 'Summary/What is it about', 972 => 'The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life.', 973 => '', 974 => '', 975 => '', 976 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 977 => 'This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else.', 978 => '', 979 => '', 980 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 981 => 'This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made. ', 982 => '', 983 => '', 984 => '', 985 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 986 => 'There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism.', 987 => '', 988 => '', 989 => '', 990 => '', 991 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 992 => '', 993 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 994 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 995 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 996 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 997 => 'My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families ', 998 => '', 999 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 1000 => '', 1001 => '', 1002 => '', 1003 => '', 1004 => '', 1005 => '', 1006 => '', 1007 => '', 1008 => 'Source #2', 1009 => 'Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed', 1010 => '', 1011 => '', 1012 => 'Type of source: Blog', 1013 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 1014 => 'URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed ', 1015 => 'Date Published: September 2nd. 2019', 1016 => 'Date Accessed: 16/06/21', 1017 => 'Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers.', 1018 => '', 1019 => '', 1020 => '', 1021 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 1022 => 'This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society ', 1023 => '', 1024 => '', 1025 => '', 1026 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? ', 1027 => 'It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation ', 1028 => '', 1029 => '', 1030 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):', 1031 => '', 1032 => '', 1033 => '', 1034 => '', 1035 => '', 1036 => '', 1037 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 1038 => '', 1039 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 1040 => '', 1041 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 1042 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 1043 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 1044 => '✔ Recent publication date ', 1045 => '☐ Older publication date ', 1046 => '☐ No publication date ', 1047 => '✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 1048 => '☐ Has author’s name', 1049 => '☐No author', 1050 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 1051 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 1052 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 1053 => '✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 1054 => '', 1055 => '', 1056 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 1057 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 1058 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 1059 => '', 1060 => '', 1061 => '', 1062 => '', 1063 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 1064 => '✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 1065 => '', 1066 => '', 1067 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 1068 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 1069 => '', 1070 => '', 1071 => '', 1072 => '', 1073 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 1074 => 'I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece.', 1075 => '', 1076 => '', 1077 => '', 1078 => '', 1079 => '', 1080 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 1081 => '', 1082 => '', 1083 => '', 1084 => '', 1085 => '', 1086 => '', 1087 => '', 1088 => '', 1089 => '', 1090 => '', 1091 => 'Source #3', 1092 => 'Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist', 1093 => '', 1094 => '', 1095 => 'Type of source: ', 1096 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 1097 => 'URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist ', 1098 => 'Date Published: September 19 2020', 1099 => 'Date Accessed: 18 June 2021', 1100 => 'Summary/What is it about', 1101 => 'This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man.', 1102 => '', 1103 => '', 1104 => '', 1105 => '', 1106 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 1107 => 'This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society', 1108 => '', 1109 => '', 1110 => '', 1111 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 1112 => 'This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big ', 1113 => '', 1114 => '', 1115 => '', 1116 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 1117 => '', 1118 => '', 1119 => '', 1120 => '', 1121 => '', 1122 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 1123 => '', 1124 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 1125 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 1126 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 1127 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 1128 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 1129 => '☐ Older publication date ', 1130 => '☐ No publication date ', 1131 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 1132 => '☐ Has author’s name', 1133 => '☐No author', 1134 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 1135 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 1136 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 1137 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 1138 => '', 1139 => '', 1140 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 1141 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 1142 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 1143 => '', 1144 => '', 1145 => '', 1146 => '', 1147 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 1148 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 1149 => '', 1150 => '', 1151 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 1152 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 1153 => '', 1154 => '', 1155 => '', 1156 => '', 1157 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it.', 1158 => '', 1159 => '', 1160 => '', 1161 => '', 1162 => '', 1163 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 1164 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 1165 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 1166 => '', 1167 => '', 1168 => '', 1169 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 1170 => '', 1171 => '', 1172 => '', 1173 => '', 1174 => '', 1175 => '', 1176 => '', 1177 => 'Source #4', 1178 => 'Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?', 1179 => '', 1180 => '', 1181 => '', 1182 => 'Type of source: Blog', 1183 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 1184 => 'URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?', 1185 => 'Date Published: 24 August 2020', 1186 => 'Date Accessed: 22 June 2021', 1187 => 'Summary/What is it about', 1188 => 'This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning', 1189 => '', 1190 => '', 1191 => '', 1192 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 1193 => 'This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed.', 1194 => '', 1195 => '', 1196 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? ', 1197 => 'It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation.', 1198 => '', 1199 => '', 1200 => '', 1201 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 1202 => '', 1203 => '1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat.', 1204 => '', 1205 => '', 1206 => '', 1207 => '', 1208 => '', 1209 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 1210 => '', 1211 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 1212 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 1213 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 1214 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 1215 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 1216 => '☐ Older publication date ', 1217 => '☐ No publication date ', 1218 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 1219 => '☐ Has author’s name', 1220 => '☐No author', 1221 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 1222 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 1223 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 1224 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 1225 => '', 1226 => '', 1227 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 1228 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 1229 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 1230 => '', 1231 => '', 1232 => '', 1233 => '', 1234 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 1235 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 1236 => '', 1237 => '', 1238 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 1239 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 1240 => '', 1241 => '', 1242 => '', 1243 => '', 1244 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too.', 1245 => '', 1246 => '', 1247 => '', 1248 => '', 1249 => '', 1250 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 1251 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 1252 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 1253 => '', 1254 => '', 1255 => '', 1256 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 1257 => '', 1258 => '', 1259 => '', 1260 => '', 1261 => '', 1262 => '', 1263 => '', 1264 => 'Source #5', 1265 => 'Title: ', 1266 => '', 1267 => '', 1268 => 'Type of source: ', 1269 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 1270 => 'URL or publication details: ', 1271 => 'Date Published: ', 1272 => 'Date Accessed: ', 1273 => 'Summary/What is it about', 1274 => '', 1275 => '', 1276 => '', 1277 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 1278 => '', 1279 => '', 1280 => '', 1281 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 1282 => '', 1283 => '', 1284 => '', 1285 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 1286 => '', 1287 => '', 1288 => '', 1289 => '', 1290 => '', 1291 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 1292 => '', 1293 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 1294 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 1295 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 1296 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 1297 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 1298 => '☐ Older publication date ', 1299 => '☐ No publication date ', 1300 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 1301 => '☐ Has author’s name', 1302 => '☐No author', 1303 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 1304 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 1305 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 1306 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 1307 => '', 1308 => '', 1309 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 1310 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 1311 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 1312 => '', 1313 => '', 1314 => '', 1315 => '', 1316 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 1317 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 1318 => '', 1319 => '', 1320 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 1321 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 1322 => '', 1323 => '', 1324 => '', 1325 => '', 1326 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 1327 => '', 1328 => '', 1329 => '', 1330 => '', 1331 => '', 1332 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 1333 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 1334 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 1335 => '', 1336 => '', 1337 => '', 1338 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 1339 => '', 1340 => '', 1341 => '', 1342 => '', 1343 => '', 1344 => '', 1345 => '', 1346 => 'Source #6', 1347 => 'Title: ', 1348 => 'Type of source: ', 1349 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 1350 => 'URL or publication details: ', 1351 => 'Date Published: ', 1352 => 'Date Accessed: ', 1353 => 'Summary/What is it about', 1354 => '', 1355 => '', 1356 => '', 1357 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 1358 => '', 1359 => '', 1360 => '', 1361 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 1362 => '', 1363 => '', 1364 => '', 1365 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 1366 => '', 1367 => '', 1368 => '', 1369 => '', 1370 => '', 1371 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 1372 => '', 1373 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 1374 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 1375 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 1376 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 1377 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 1378 => '☐ Older publication date ', 1379 => '☐ No publication date ', 1380 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 1381 => '☐ Has author’s name', 1382 => '☐No author', 1383 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 1384 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 1385 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 1386 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 1387 => '', 1388 => '', 1389 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 1390 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 1391 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 1392 => '', 1393 => '', 1394 => '', 1395 => '', 1396 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 1397 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 1398 => '', 1399 => '', 1400 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 1401 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 1402 => '', 1403 => '', 1404 => '', 1405 => '', 1406 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 1407 => '', 1408 => '', 1409 => '', 1410 => '', 1411 => '', 1412 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 1413 => 'Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/', 1414 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 1415 => '', 1416 => '', 1417 => '', 1418 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 1419 => '', 1420 => '', 1421 => '', 1422 => '', 1423 => '', 1424 => '', 1425 => '', 1426 => 'Inquiry Framing ', 1427 => 'Topic: Capitalism', 1428 => '', 1429 => '', 1430 => 'What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name.', 1431 => '', 1432 => '', 1433 => 'How topic links to a studied text:', 1434 => 'Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’', 1435 => '', 1436 => '', 1437 => 'Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society.', 1438 => '', 1439 => '', 1440 => 'Key questions: ', 1441 => 'At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal ', 1442 => '1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes', 1443 => '2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts', 1444 => '3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism ', 1445 => '', 1446 => '', 1447 => '', 1448 => '', 1449 => 'Source #1', 1450 => 'Title: Parasite', 1451 => 'Type of source: Movie', 1452 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 1453 => 'URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment', 1454 => 'Date Published: 27 June 2019', 1455 => 'Date Accessed: March 2021', 1456 => 'Summary/What is it about', 1457 => 'The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life.', 1458 => '', 1459 => '', 1460 => '', 1461 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 1462 => 'This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else.', 1463 => '', 1464 => '', 1465 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 1466 => 'This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made. ', 1467 => '', 1468 => '', 1469 => '', 1470 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 1471 => 'There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism.', 1472 => '', 1473 => '', 1474 => '', 1475 => '', 1476 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 1477 => '', 1478 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 1479 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 1480 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 1481 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 1482 => 'My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families ', 1483 => '', 1484 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 1485 => '', 1486 => '', 1487 => '', 1488 => '', 1489 => '', 1490 => '', 1491 => '', 1492 => '', 1493 => 'Source #2', 1494 => 'Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed', 1495 => '', 1496 => '', 1497 => 'Type of source: Blog', 1498 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 1499 => 'URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed ', 1500 => 'Date Published: September 2nd. 2019', 1501 => 'Date Accessed: 16/06/21', 1502 => 'Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers.', 1503 => '', 1504 => '', 1505 => '', 1506 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 1507 => 'This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society ', 1508 => '', 1509 => '', 1510 => '', 1511 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? ', 1512 => 'It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation ', 1513 => '', 1514 => '', 1515 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):', 1516 => '', 1517 => '', 1518 => '', 1519 => '', 1520 => '', 1521 => '', 1522 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 1523 => '', 1524 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 1525 => '', 1526 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 1527 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 1528 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 1529 => '✔ Recent publication date ', 1530 => '☐ Older publication date ', 1531 => '☐ No publication date ', 1532 => '✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 1533 => '☐ Has author’s name', 1534 => '☐No author', 1535 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 1536 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 1537 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 1538 => '✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 1539 => '', 1540 => '', 1541 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 1542 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 1543 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 1544 => '', 1545 => '', 1546 => '', 1547 => '', 1548 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 1549 => '✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 1550 => '', 1551 => '', 1552 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 1553 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 1554 => '', 1555 => '', 1556 => '', 1557 => '', 1558 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 1559 => 'I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece.', 1560 => '', 1561 => '', 1562 => '', 1563 => '', 1564 => '', 1565 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 1566 => '', 1567 => '', 1568 => '', 1569 => '', 1570 => '', 1571 => '', 1572 => '', 1573 => '', 1574 => '', 1575 => '', 1576 => 'Source #3', 1577 => 'Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist', 1578 => '', 1579 => '', 1580 => 'Type of source: ', 1581 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 1582 => 'URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist ', 1583 => 'Date Published: September 19 2020', 1584 => 'Date Accessed: 18 June 2021', 1585 => 'Summary/What is it about', 1586 => 'This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man.', 1587 => '', 1588 => '', 1589 => '', 1590 => '', 1591 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 1592 => 'This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society', 1593 => '', 1594 => '', 1595 => '', 1596 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 1597 => 'This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big ', 1598 => '', 1599 => '', 1600 => '', 1601 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 1602 => '', 1603 => '', 1604 => '', 1605 => '', 1606 => '', 1607 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 1608 => '', 1609 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 1610 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 1611 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 1612 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 1613 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 1614 => '☐ Older publication date ', 1615 => '☐ No publication date ', 1616 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 1617 => '☐ Has author’s name', 1618 => '☐No author', 1619 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 1620 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 1621 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 1622 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 1623 => '', 1624 => '', 1625 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 1626 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 1627 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 1628 => '', 1629 => '', 1630 => '', 1631 => '', 1632 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 1633 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 1634 => '', 1635 => '', 1636 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 1637 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 1638 => '', 1639 => '', 1640 => '', 1641 => '', 1642 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it.', 1643 => '', 1644 => '', 1645 => '', 1646 => '', 1647 => '', 1648 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 1649 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 1650 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 1651 => '', 1652 => '', 1653 => '', 1654 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 1655 => '', 1656 => '', 1657 => '', 1658 => '', 1659 => '', 1660 => '', 1661 => '', 1662 => 'Source #4', 1663 => 'Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?', 1664 => '', 1665 => '', 1666 => '', 1667 => 'Type of source: Blog', 1668 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 1669 => 'URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?', 1670 => 'Date Published: 24 August 2020', 1671 => 'Date Accessed: 22 June 2021', 1672 => 'Summary/What is it about', 1673 => 'This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning', 1674 => '', 1675 => '', 1676 => '', 1677 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 1678 => 'This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed.', 1679 => '', 1680 => '', 1681 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? ', 1682 => 'It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation.', 1683 => '', 1684 => '', 1685 => '', 1686 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 1687 => '', 1688 => '1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat.', 1689 => '', 1690 => '', 1691 => '', 1692 => '', 1693 => '', 1694 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 1695 => '', 1696 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 1697 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 1698 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 1699 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 1700 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 1701 => '☐ Older publication date ', 1702 => '☐ No publication date ', 1703 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 1704 => '☐ Has author’s name', 1705 => '☐No author', 1706 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 1707 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 1708 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 1709 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 1710 => '', 1711 => '', 1712 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 1713 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 1714 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 1715 => '', 1716 => '', 1717 => '', 1718 => '', 1719 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 1720 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 1721 => '', 1722 => '', 1723 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 1724 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 1725 => '', 1726 => '', 1727 => '', 1728 => '', 1729 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too.', 1730 => '', 1731 => '', 1732 => '', 1733 => '', 1734 => '', 1735 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 1736 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 1737 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 1738 => '', 1739 => '', 1740 => '', 1741 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 1742 => '', 1743 => '', 1744 => '', 1745 => '', 1746 => '', 1747 => '', 1748 => '', 1749 => 'Source #5', 1750 => 'Title: ', 1751 => '', 1752 => '', 1753 => 'Type of source: ', 1754 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 1755 => 'URL or publication details: ', 1756 => 'Date Published: ', 1757 => 'Date Accessed: ', 1758 => 'Summary/What is it about', 1759 => '', 1760 => '', 1761 => '', 1762 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 1763 => '', 1764 => '', 1765 => '', 1766 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 1767 => '', 1768 => '', 1769 => '', 1770 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 1771 => '', 1772 => '', 1773 => '', 1774 => '', 1775 => '', 1776 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 1777 => '', 1778 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 1779 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 1780 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 1781 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 1782 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 1783 => '☐ Older publication date ', 1784 => '☐ No publication date ', 1785 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 1786 => '☐ Has author’s name', 1787 => '☐No author', 1788 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 1789 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 1790 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 1791 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 1792 => '', 1793 => '', 1794 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 1795 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 1796 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 1797 => '', 1798 => '', 1799 => '', 1800 => '', 1801 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 1802 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 1803 => '', 1804 => '', 1805 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 1806 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 1807 => '', 1808 => '', 1809 => '', 1810 => '', 1811 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 1812 => '', 1813 => '', 1814 => '', 1815 => '', 1816 => '', 1817 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 1818 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 1819 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 1820 => '', 1821 => '', 1822 => '', 1823 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 1824 => '', 1825 => '', 1826 => '', 1827 => '', 1828 => '', 1829 => '', 1830 => '', 1831 => 'Source #6', 1832 => 'Title: ', 1833 => 'Type of source: ', 1834 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 1835 => 'URL or publication details: ', 1836 => 'Date Published: ', 1837 => 'Date Accessed: ', 1838 => 'Summary/What is it about', 1839 => '', 1840 => '', 1841 => '', 1842 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 1843 => '', 1844 => '', 1845 => '', 1846 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 1847 => '', 1848 => '', 1849 => '', 1850 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 1851 => '', 1852 => '', 1853 => '', 1854 => '', 1855 => '', 1856 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 1857 => '', 1858 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 1859 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 1860 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 1861 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 1862 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 1863 => '☐ Older publication date ', 1864 => '☐ No publication date ', 1865 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 1866 => '☐ Has author’s name', 1867 => '☐No author', 1868 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 1869 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 1870 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 1871 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 1872 => '', 1873 => '', 1874 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 1875 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 1876 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 1877 => '', 1878 => '', 1879 => '', 1880 => '', 1881 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 1882 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 1883 => '', 1884 => '', 1885 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 1886 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 1887 => '', 1888 => '', 1889 => '', 1890 => '', 1891 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 1892 => '', 1893 => '', 1894 => '', 1895 => '', 1896 => '', 1897 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 1898 => 'Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/', 1899 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 1900 => '', 1901 => '', 1902 => '', 1903 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 1904 => '', 1905 => '', 1906 => '', 1907 => '', 1908 => '', 1909 => '', 1910 => '', 1911 => 'Inquiry Framing ', 1912 => 'Topic: Capitalism', 1913 => '', 1914 => '', 1915 => 'What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name.', 1916 => '', 1917 => '', 1918 => 'How topic links to a studied text:', 1919 => 'Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’', 1920 => '', 1921 => '', 1922 => 'Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society.', 1923 => '', 1924 => '', 1925 => 'Key questions: ', 1926 => 'At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal ', 1927 => '1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes', 1928 => '2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts', 1929 => '3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism ', 1930 => '', 1931 => '', 1932 => '', 1933 => '', 1934 => 'Source #1', 1935 => 'Title: Parasite', 1936 => 'Type of source: Movie', 1937 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 1938 => 'URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment', 1939 => 'Date Published: 27 June 2019', 1940 => 'Date Accessed: March 2021', 1941 => 'Summary/What is it about', 1942 => 'The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life.', 1943 => '', 1944 => '', 1945 => '', 1946 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 1947 => 'This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else.', 1948 => '', 1949 => '', 1950 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 1951 => 'This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made. ', 1952 => '', 1953 => '', 1954 => '', 1955 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 1956 => 'There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism.', 1957 => '', 1958 => '', 1959 => '', 1960 => '', 1961 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 1962 => '', 1963 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 1964 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 1965 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 1966 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 1967 => 'My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families ', 1968 => '', 1969 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 1970 => '', 1971 => '', 1972 => '', 1973 => '', 1974 => '', 1975 => '', 1976 => '', 1977 => '', 1978 => 'Source #2', 1979 => 'Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed', 1980 => '', 1981 => '', 1982 => 'Type of source: Blog', 1983 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 1984 => 'URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed ', 1985 => 'Date Published: September 2nd. 2019', 1986 => 'Date Accessed: 16/06/21', 1987 => 'Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers.', 1988 => '', 1989 => '', 1990 => '', 1991 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 1992 => 'This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society ', 1993 => '', 1994 => '', 1995 => '', 1996 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? ', 1997 => 'It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation ', 1998 => '', 1999 => '', 2000 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):', 2001 => '', 2002 => '', 2003 => '', 2004 => '', 2005 => '', 2006 => '', 2007 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 2008 => '', 2009 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 2010 => '', 2011 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 2012 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 2013 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 2014 => '✔ Recent publication date ', 2015 => '☐ Older publication date ', 2016 => '☐ No publication date ', 2017 => '✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 2018 => '☐ Has author’s name', 2019 => '☐No author', 2020 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 2021 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 2022 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 2023 => '✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 2024 => '', 2025 => '', 2026 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 2027 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 2028 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 2029 => '', 2030 => '', 2031 => '', 2032 => '', 2033 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 2034 => '✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 2035 => '', 2036 => '', 2037 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 2038 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 2039 => '', 2040 => '', 2041 => '', 2042 => '', 2043 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 2044 => 'I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece.', 2045 => '', 2046 => '', 2047 => '', 2048 => '', 2049 => '', 2050 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 2051 => '', 2052 => '', 2053 => '', 2054 => '', 2055 => '', 2056 => '', 2057 => '', 2058 => '', 2059 => '', 2060 => '', 2061 => 'Source #3', 2062 => 'Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist', 2063 => '', 2064 => '', 2065 => 'Type of source: ', 2066 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 2067 => 'URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist ', 2068 => 'Date Published: September 19 2020', 2069 => 'Date Accessed: 18 June 2021', 2070 => 'Summary/What is it about', 2071 => 'This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man.', 2072 => '', 2073 => '', 2074 => '', 2075 => '', 2076 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 2077 => 'This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society', 2078 => '', 2079 => '', 2080 => '', 2081 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 2082 => 'This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big ', 2083 => '', 2084 => '', 2085 => '', 2086 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 2087 => '', 2088 => '', 2089 => '', 2090 => '', 2091 => '', 2092 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 2093 => '', 2094 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 2095 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 2096 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 2097 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 2098 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 2099 => '☐ Older publication date ', 2100 => '☐ No publication date ', 2101 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 2102 => '☐ Has author’s name', 2103 => '☐No author', 2104 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 2105 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 2106 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 2107 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 2108 => '', 2109 => '', 2110 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 2111 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 2112 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 2113 => '', 2114 => '', 2115 => '', 2116 => '', 2117 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 2118 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 2119 => '', 2120 => '', 2121 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 2122 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 2123 => '', 2124 => '', 2125 => '', 2126 => '', 2127 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it.', 2128 => '', 2129 => '', 2130 => '', 2131 => '', 2132 => '', 2133 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 2134 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 2135 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 2136 => '', 2137 => '', 2138 => '', 2139 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 2140 => '', 2141 => '', 2142 => '', 2143 => '', 2144 => '', 2145 => '', 2146 => '', 2147 => 'Source #4', 2148 => 'Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?', 2149 => '', 2150 => '', 2151 => '', 2152 => 'Type of source: Blog', 2153 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 2154 => 'URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?', 2155 => 'Date Published: 24 August 2020', 2156 => 'Date Accessed: 22 June 2021', 2157 => 'Summary/What is it about', 2158 => 'This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning', 2159 => '', 2160 => '', 2161 => '', 2162 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 2163 => 'This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed.', 2164 => '', 2165 => '', 2166 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? ', 2167 => 'It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation.', 2168 => '', 2169 => '', 2170 => '', 2171 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 2172 => '', 2173 => '1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat.', 2174 => '', 2175 => '', 2176 => '', 2177 => '', 2178 => '', 2179 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 2180 => '', 2181 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 2182 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 2183 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 2184 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 2185 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 2186 => '☐ Older publication date ', 2187 => '☐ No publication date ', 2188 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 2189 => '☐ Has author’s name', 2190 => '☐No author', 2191 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 2192 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 2193 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 2194 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 2195 => '', 2196 => '', 2197 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 2198 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 2199 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 2200 => '', 2201 => '', 2202 => '', 2203 => '', 2204 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 2205 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 2206 => '', 2207 => '', 2208 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 2209 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 2210 => '', 2211 => '', 2212 => '', 2213 => '', 2214 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too.', 2215 => '', 2216 => '', 2217 => '', 2218 => '', 2219 => '', 2220 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 2221 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 2222 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 2223 => '', 2224 => '', 2225 => '', 2226 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 2227 => '', 2228 => '', 2229 => '', 2230 => '', 2231 => '', 2232 => '', 2233 => '', 2234 => 'Source #5', 2235 => 'Title: ', 2236 => '', 2237 => '', 2238 => 'Type of source: ', 2239 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 2240 => 'URL or publication details: ', 2241 => 'Date Published: ', 2242 => 'Date Accessed: ', 2243 => 'Summary/What is it about', 2244 => '', 2245 => '', 2246 => '', 2247 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 2248 => '', 2249 => '', 2250 => '', 2251 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 2252 => '', 2253 => '', 2254 => '', 2255 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 2256 => '', 2257 => '', 2258 => '', 2259 => '', 2260 => '', 2261 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 2262 => '', 2263 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 2264 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 2265 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 2266 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 2267 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 2268 => '☐ Older publication date ', 2269 => '☐ No publication date ', 2270 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 2271 => '☐ Has author’s name', 2272 => '☐No author', 2273 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 2274 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 2275 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 2276 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 2277 => '', 2278 => '', 2279 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 2280 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 2281 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 2282 => '', 2283 => '', 2284 => '', 2285 => '', 2286 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 2287 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 2288 => '', 2289 => '', 2290 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 2291 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 2292 => '', 2293 => '', 2294 => '', 2295 => '', 2296 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 2297 => '', 2298 => '', 2299 => '', 2300 => '', 2301 => '', 2302 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 2303 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 2304 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 2305 => '', 2306 => '', 2307 => '', 2308 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 2309 => '', 2310 => '', 2311 => '', 2312 => '', 2313 => '', 2314 => '', 2315 => '', 2316 => 'Source #6', 2317 => 'Title: ', 2318 => 'Type of source: ', 2319 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 2320 => 'URL or publication details: ', 2321 => 'Date Published: ', 2322 => 'Date Accessed: ', 2323 => 'Summary/What is it about', 2324 => '', 2325 => '', 2326 => '', 2327 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 2328 => '', 2329 => '', 2330 => '', 2331 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 2332 => '', 2333 => '', 2334 => '', 2335 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 2336 => '', 2337 => '', 2338 => '', 2339 => '', 2340 => '', 2341 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 2342 => '', 2343 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 2344 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 2345 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 2346 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 2347 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 2348 => '☐ Older publication date ', 2349 => '☐ No publication date ', 2350 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 2351 => '☐ Has author’s name', 2352 => '☐No author', 2353 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 2354 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 2355 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 2356 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 2357 => '', 2358 => '', 2359 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 2360 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 2361 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 2362 => '', 2363 => '', 2364 => '', 2365 => '', 2366 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 2367 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 2368 => '', 2369 => '', 2370 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 2371 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 2372 => '', 2373 => '', 2374 => '', 2375 => '', 2376 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 2377 => '', 2378 => '', 2379 => '', 2380 => '', 2381 => '', 2382 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 2383 => 'Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/', 2384 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 2385 => '', 2386 => '', 2387 => '', 2388 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 2389 => '', 2390 => '', 2391 => '', 2392 => '', 2393 => '', 2394 => '', 2395 => '', 2396 => 'Inquiry Framing ', 2397 => 'Topic: Capitalism', 2398 => '', 2399 => '', 2400 => 'What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name.', 2401 => '', 2402 => '', 2403 => 'How topic links to a studied text:', 2404 => 'Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’', 2405 => '', 2406 => '', 2407 => 'Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society.', 2408 => '', 2409 => '', 2410 => 'Key questions: ', 2411 => 'At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal ', 2412 => '1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes', 2413 => '2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts', 2414 => '3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism ', 2415 => '', 2416 => '', 2417 => '', 2418 => '', 2419 => 'Source #1', 2420 => 'Title: Parasite', 2421 => 'Type of source: Movie', 2422 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 2423 => 'URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment', 2424 => 'Date Published: 27 June 2019', 2425 => 'Date Accessed: March 2021', 2426 => 'Summary/What is it about', 2427 => 'The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life.', 2428 => '', 2429 => '', 2430 => '', 2431 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 2432 => 'This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else.', 2433 => '', 2434 => '', 2435 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 2436 => 'This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made. ', 2437 => '', 2438 => '', 2439 => '', 2440 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 2441 => 'There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism.', 2442 => '', 2443 => '', 2444 => '', 2445 => '', 2446 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 2447 => '', 2448 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 2449 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 2450 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 2451 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 2452 => 'My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families ', 2453 => '', 2454 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 2455 => '', 2456 => '', 2457 => '', 2458 => '', 2459 => '', 2460 => '', 2461 => '', 2462 => '', 2463 => 'Source #2', 2464 => 'Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed', 2465 => '', 2466 => '', 2467 => 'Type of source: Blog', 2468 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 2469 => 'URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed ', 2470 => 'Date Published: September 2nd. 2019', 2471 => 'Date Accessed: 16/06/21', 2472 => 'Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers.', 2473 => '', 2474 => '', 2475 => '', 2476 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 2477 => 'This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society ', 2478 => '', 2479 => '', 2480 => '', 2481 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? ', 2482 => 'It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation ', 2483 => '', 2484 => '', 2485 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):', 2486 => '', 2487 => '', 2488 => '', 2489 => '', 2490 => '', 2491 => '', 2492 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 2493 => '', 2494 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 2495 => '', 2496 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 2497 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 2498 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 2499 => '✔ Recent publication date ', 2500 => '☐ Older publication date ', 2501 => '☐ No publication date ', 2502 => '✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 2503 => '☐ Has author’s name', 2504 => '☐No author', 2505 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 2506 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 2507 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 2508 => '✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 2509 => '', 2510 => '', 2511 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 2512 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 2513 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 2514 => '', 2515 => '', 2516 => '', 2517 => '', 2518 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 2519 => '✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 2520 => '', 2521 => '', 2522 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 2523 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 2524 => '', 2525 => '', 2526 => '', 2527 => '', 2528 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 2529 => 'I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece.', 2530 => '', 2531 => '', 2532 => '', 2533 => '', 2534 => '', 2535 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 2536 => '', 2537 => '', 2538 => '', 2539 => '', 2540 => '', 2541 => '', 2542 => '', 2543 => '', 2544 => '', 2545 => '', 2546 => 'Source #3', 2547 => 'Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist', 2548 => '', 2549 => '', 2550 => 'Type of source: ', 2551 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 2552 => 'URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist ', 2553 => 'Date Published: September 19 2020', 2554 => 'Date Accessed: 18 June 2021', 2555 => 'Summary/What is it about', 2556 => 'This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man.', 2557 => '', 2558 => '', 2559 => '', 2560 => '', 2561 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 2562 => 'This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society', 2563 => '', 2564 => '', 2565 => '', 2566 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 2567 => 'This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big ', 2568 => '', 2569 => '', 2570 => '', 2571 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 2572 => '', 2573 => '', 2574 => '', 2575 => '', 2576 => '', 2577 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 2578 => '', 2579 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 2580 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 2581 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 2582 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 2583 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 2584 => '☐ Older publication date ', 2585 => '☐ No publication date ', 2586 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 2587 => '☐ Has author’s name', 2588 => '☐No author', 2589 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 2590 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 2591 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 2592 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 2593 => '', 2594 => '', 2595 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 2596 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 2597 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 2598 => '', 2599 => '', 2600 => '', 2601 => '', 2602 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 2603 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 2604 => '', 2605 => '', 2606 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 2607 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 2608 => '', 2609 => '', 2610 => '', 2611 => '', 2612 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it.', 2613 => '', 2614 => '', 2615 => '', 2616 => '', 2617 => '', 2618 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 2619 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 2620 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 2621 => '', 2622 => '', 2623 => '', 2624 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 2625 => '', 2626 => '', 2627 => '', 2628 => '', 2629 => '', 2630 => '', 2631 => '', 2632 => 'Source #4', 2633 => 'Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?', 2634 => '', 2635 => '', 2636 => '', 2637 => 'Type of source: Blog', 2638 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 2639 => 'URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?', 2640 => 'Date Published: 24 August 2020', 2641 => 'Date Accessed: 22 June 2021', 2642 => 'Summary/What is it about', 2643 => 'This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning', 2644 => '', 2645 => '', 2646 => '', 2647 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 2648 => 'This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed.', 2649 => '', 2650 => '', 2651 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? ', 2652 => 'It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation.', 2653 => '', 2654 => '', 2655 => '', 2656 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 2657 => '', 2658 => '1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat.', 2659 => '', 2660 => '', 2661 => '', 2662 => '', 2663 => '', 2664 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 2665 => '', 2666 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 2667 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 2668 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 2669 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 2670 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 2671 => '☐ Older publication date ', 2672 => '☐ No publication date ', 2673 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 2674 => '☐ Has author’s name', 2675 => '☐No author', 2676 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 2677 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 2678 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 2679 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 2680 => '', 2681 => '', 2682 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 2683 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 2684 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 2685 => '', 2686 => '', 2687 => '', 2688 => '', 2689 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 2690 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 2691 => '', 2692 => '', 2693 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 2694 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 2695 => '', 2696 => '', 2697 => '', 2698 => '', 2699 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too.', 2700 => '', 2701 => '', 2702 => '', 2703 => '', 2704 => '', 2705 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 2706 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 2707 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 2708 => '', 2709 => '', 2710 => '', 2711 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 2712 => '', 2713 => '', 2714 => '', 2715 => '', 2716 => '', 2717 => '', 2718 => '', 2719 => 'Source #5', 2720 => 'Title: ', 2721 => '', 2722 => '', 2723 => 'Type of source: ', 2724 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 2725 => 'URL or publication details: ', 2726 => 'Date Published: ', 2727 => 'Date Accessed: ', 2728 => 'Summary/What is it about', 2729 => '', 2730 => '', 2731 => '', 2732 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 2733 => '', 2734 => '', 2735 => '', 2736 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 2737 => '', 2738 => '', 2739 => '', 2740 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 2741 => '', 2742 => '', 2743 => '', 2744 => '', 2745 => '', 2746 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 2747 => '', 2748 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 2749 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 2750 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 2751 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 2752 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 2753 => '☐ Older publication date ', 2754 => '☐ No publication date ', 2755 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 2756 => '☐ Has author’s name', 2757 => '☐No author', 2758 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 2759 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 2760 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 2761 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 2762 => '', 2763 => '', 2764 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 2765 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 2766 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 2767 => '', 2768 => '', 2769 => '', 2770 => '', 2771 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 2772 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 2773 => '', 2774 => '', 2775 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 2776 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 2777 => '', 2778 => '', 2779 => '', 2780 => '', 2781 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 2782 => '', 2783 => '', 2784 => '', 2785 => '', 2786 => '', 2787 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 2788 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 2789 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 2790 => '', 2791 => '', 2792 => '', 2793 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 2794 => '', 2795 => '', 2796 => '', 2797 => '', 2798 => '', 2799 => '', 2800 => '', 2801 => 'Source #6', 2802 => 'Title: ', 2803 => 'Type of source: ', 2804 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 2805 => 'URL or publication details: ', 2806 => 'Date Published: ', 2807 => 'Date Accessed: ', 2808 => 'Summary/What is it about', 2809 => '', 2810 => '', 2811 => '', 2812 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 2813 => '', 2814 => '', 2815 => '', 2816 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 2817 => '', 2818 => '', 2819 => '', 2820 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 2821 => '', 2822 => '', 2823 => '', 2824 => '', 2825 => '', 2826 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 2827 => '', 2828 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 2829 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 2830 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 2831 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 2832 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 2833 => '☐ Older publication date ', 2834 => '☐ No publication date ', 2835 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 2836 => '☐ Has author’s name', 2837 => '☐No author', 2838 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 2839 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 2840 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 2841 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 2842 => '', 2843 => '', 2844 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 2845 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 2846 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 2847 => '', 2848 => '', 2849 => '', 2850 => '', 2851 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 2852 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 2853 => '', 2854 => '', 2855 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 2856 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 2857 => '', 2858 => '', 2859 => '', 2860 => '', 2861 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 2862 => '', 2863 => '', 2864 => '', 2865 => '', 2866 => '', 2867 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 2868 => 'Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/', 2869 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 2870 => '', 2871 => '', 2872 => '', 2873 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 2874 => '', 2875 => '', 2876 => '', 2877 => '', 2878 => '', 2879 => '', 2880 => '', 2881 => 'Inquiry Framing ', 2882 => 'Topic: Capitalism', 2883 => '', 2884 => '', 2885 => 'What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name.', 2886 => '', 2887 => '', 2888 => 'How topic links to a studied text:', 2889 => 'Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’', 2890 => '', 2891 => '', 2892 => 'Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society.', 2893 => '', 2894 => '', 2895 => 'Key questions: ', 2896 => 'At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal ', 2897 => '1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes', 2898 => '2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts', 2899 => '3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism ', 2900 => '', 2901 => '', 2902 => '', 2903 => '', 2904 => 'Source #1', 2905 => 'Title: Parasite', 2906 => 'Type of source: Movie', 2907 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 2908 => 'URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment', 2909 => 'Date Published: 27 June 2019', 2910 => 'Date Accessed: March 2021', 2911 => 'Summary/What is it about', 2912 => 'The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life.', 2913 => '', 2914 => '', 2915 => '', 2916 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 2917 => 'This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else.', 2918 => '', 2919 => '', 2920 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 2921 => 'This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made. ', 2922 => '', 2923 => '', 2924 => '', 2925 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 2926 => 'There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism.', 2927 => '', 2928 => '', 2929 => '', 2930 => '', 2931 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 2932 => '', 2933 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 2934 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 2935 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 2936 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 2937 => 'My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families ', 2938 => '', 2939 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 2940 => '', 2941 => '', 2942 => '', 2943 => '', 2944 => '', 2945 => '', 2946 => '', 2947 => '', 2948 => 'Source #2', 2949 => 'Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed', 2950 => '', 2951 => '', 2952 => 'Type of source: Blog', 2953 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 2954 => 'URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed ', 2955 => 'Date Published: September 2nd. 2019', 2956 => 'Date Accessed: 16/06/21', 2957 => 'Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers.', 2958 => '', 2959 => '', 2960 => '', 2961 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 2962 => 'This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society ', 2963 => '', 2964 => '', 2965 => '', 2966 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? ', 2967 => 'It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation ', 2968 => '', 2969 => '', 2970 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):', 2971 => '', 2972 => '', 2973 => '', 2974 => '', 2975 => '', 2976 => '', 2977 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 2978 => '', 2979 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 2980 => '', 2981 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 2982 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 2983 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 2984 => '✔ Recent publication date ', 2985 => '☐ Older publication date ', 2986 => '☐ No publication date ', 2987 => '✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 2988 => '☐ Has author’s name', 2989 => '☐No author', 2990 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 2991 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 2992 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 2993 => '✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 2994 => '', 2995 => '', 2996 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 2997 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 2998 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 2999 => '', 3000 => '', 3001 => '', 3002 => '', 3003 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 3004 => '✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 3005 => '', 3006 => '', 3007 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 3008 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 3009 => '', 3010 => '', 3011 => '', 3012 => '', 3013 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 3014 => 'I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece.', 3015 => '', 3016 => '', 3017 => '', 3018 => '', 3019 => '', 3020 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 3021 => '', 3022 => '', 3023 => '', 3024 => '', 3025 => '', 3026 => '', 3027 => '', 3028 => '', 3029 => '', 3030 => '', 3031 => 'Source #3', 3032 => 'Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist', 3033 => '', 3034 => '', 3035 => 'Type of source: ', 3036 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 3037 => 'URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist ', 3038 => 'Date Published: September 19 2020', 3039 => 'Date Accessed: 18 June 2021', 3040 => 'Summary/What is it about', 3041 => 'This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man.', 3042 => '', 3043 => '', 3044 => '', 3045 => '', 3046 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 3047 => 'This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society', 3048 => '', 3049 => '', 3050 => '', 3051 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 3052 => 'This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big ', 3053 => '', 3054 => '', 3055 => '', 3056 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 3057 => '', 3058 => '', 3059 => '', 3060 => '', 3061 => '', 3062 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 3063 => '', 3064 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 3065 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 3066 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 3067 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 3068 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 3069 => '☐ Older publication date ', 3070 => '☐ No publication date ', 3071 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 3072 => '☐ Has author’s name', 3073 => '☐No author', 3074 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 3075 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 3076 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 3077 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 3078 => '', 3079 => '', 3080 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 3081 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 3082 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 3083 => '', 3084 => '', 3085 => '', 3086 => '', 3087 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 3088 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 3089 => '', 3090 => '', 3091 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 3092 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 3093 => '', 3094 => '', 3095 => '', 3096 => '', 3097 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it.', 3098 => '', 3099 => '', 3100 => '', 3101 => '', 3102 => '', 3103 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 3104 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 3105 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 3106 => '', 3107 => '', 3108 => '', 3109 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 3110 => '', 3111 => '', 3112 => '', 3113 => '', 3114 => '', 3115 => '', 3116 => '', 3117 => 'Source #4', 3118 => 'Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?', 3119 => '', 3120 => '', 3121 => '', 3122 => 'Type of source: Blog', 3123 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 3124 => 'URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?', 3125 => 'Date Published: 24 August 2020', 3126 => 'Date Accessed: 22 June 2021', 3127 => 'Summary/What is it about', 3128 => 'This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning', 3129 => '', 3130 => '', 3131 => '', 3132 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 3133 => 'This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed.', 3134 => '', 3135 => '', 3136 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? ', 3137 => 'It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation.', 3138 => '', 3139 => '', 3140 => '', 3141 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 3142 => '', 3143 => '1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat.', 3144 => '', 3145 => '', 3146 => '', 3147 => '', 3148 => '', 3149 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 3150 => '', 3151 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 3152 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 3153 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 3154 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 3155 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 3156 => '☐ Older publication date ', 3157 => '☐ No publication date ', 3158 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 3159 => '☐ Has author’s name', 3160 => '☐No author', 3161 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 3162 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 3163 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 3164 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 3165 => '', 3166 => '', 3167 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 3168 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 3169 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 3170 => '', 3171 => '', 3172 => '', 3173 => '', 3174 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 3175 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 3176 => '', 3177 => '', 3178 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 3179 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 3180 => '', 3181 => '', 3182 => '', 3183 => '', 3184 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too.', 3185 => '', 3186 => '', 3187 => '', 3188 => '', 3189 => '', 3190 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 3191 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 3192 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 3193 => '', 3194 => '', 3195 => '', 3196 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 3197 => '', 3198 => '', 3199 => '', 3200 => '', 3201 => '', 3202 => '', 3203 => '', 3204 => 'Source #5', 3205 => 'Title: ', 3206 => '', 3207 => '', 3208 => 'Type of source: ', 3209 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 3210 => 'URL or publication details: ', 3211 => 'Date Published: ', 3212 => 'Date Accessed: ', 3213 => 'Summary/What is it about', 3214 => '', 3215 => '', 3216 => '', 3217 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 3218 => '', 3219 => '', 3220 => '', 3221 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 3222 => '', 3223 => '', 3224 => '', 3225 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 3226 => '', 3227 => '', 3228 => '', 3229 => '', 3230 => '', 3231 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 3232 => '', 3233 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 3234 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 3235 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 3236 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 3237 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 3238 => '☐ Older publication date ', 3239 => '☐ No publication date ', 3240 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 3241 => '☐ Has author’s name', 3242 => '☐No author', 3243 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 3244 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 3245 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 3246 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 3247 => '', 3248 => '', 3249 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 3250 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 3251 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 3252 => '', 3253 => '', 3254 => '', 3255 => '', 3256 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 3257 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 3258 => '', 3259 => '', 3260 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 3261 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 3262 => '', 3263 => '', 3264 => '', 3265 => '', 3266 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 3267 => '', 3268 => '', 3269 => '', 3270 => '', 3271 => '', 3272 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 3273 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 3274 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 3275 => '', 3276 => '', 3277 => '', 3278 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 3279 => '', 3280 => '', 3281 => '', 3282 => '', 3283 => '', 3284 => '', 3285 => '', 3286 => 'Source #6', 3287 => 'Title: ', 3288 => 'Type of source: ', 3289 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 3290 => 'URL or publication details: ', 3291 => 'Date Published: ', 3292 => 'Date Accessed: ', 3293 => 'Summary/What is it about', 3294 => '', 3295 => '', 3296 => '', 3297 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 3298 => '', 3299 => '', 3300 => '', 3301 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 3302 => '', 3303 => '', 3304 => '', 3305 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 3306 => '', 3307 => '', 3308 => '', 3309 => '', 3310 => '', 3311 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 3312 => '', 3313 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 3314 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 3315 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 3316 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 3317 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 3318 => '☐ Older publication date ', 3319 => '☐ No publication date ', 3320 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 3321 => '☐ Has author’s name', 3322 => '☐No author', 3323 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 3324 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 3325 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 3326 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 3327 => '', 3328 => '', 3329 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 3330 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 3331 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 3332 => '', 3333 => '', 3334 => '', 3335 => '', 3336 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 3337 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 3338 => '', 3339 => '', 3340 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 3341 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 3342 => '', 3343 => '', 3344 => '', 3345 => '', 3346 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 3347 => '', 3348 => '', 3349 => '', 3350 => '', 3351 => '', 3352 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 3353 => 'Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/', 3354 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 3355 => '', 3356 => '', 3357 => '', 3358 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 3359 => '', 3360 => '', 3361 => '', 3362 => '', 3363 => '', 3364 => '', 3365 => '', 3366 => 'Inquiry Framing ', 3367 => 'Topic: Capitalism', 3368 => '', 3369 => '', 3370 => 'What I already know/think about the topic: It's a pyramid of society with different types of groups, like at the top you have the richest of the rich, then it gradually decreases till it gets all the way to the bottom with homeless people with $0 to their name.', 3371 => '', 3372 => '', 3373 => 'How topic links to a studied text:', 3374 => 'Either from class or ‘personal reading programme’', 3375 => '', 3376 => '', 3377 => 'Hypothesis statement or question: Does capitalism cause greed in the higher groups of society.', 3378 => '', 3379 => '', 3380 => 'Key questions: ', 3381 => 'At least 3 - eg cause, effect, solution or historical, philosophical, societal ', 3382 => '1. Does capitalism cause impact on lower classes', 3383 => '2. Why does the idea of capitalism create negative thoughts', 3384 => '3. Does greed have something to do with capitalism ', 3385 => '', 3386 => '', 3387 => '', 3388 => '', 3389 => 'Source #1', 3390 => 'Title: Parasite', 3391 => 'Type of source: Movie', 3392 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 3393 => 'URL or publication details: CJ Entertainment', 3394 => 'Date Published: 27 June 2019', 3395 => 'Date Accessed: March 2021', 3396 => 'Summary/What is it about', 3397 => 'The struggling Kim family sees an opportunity when the son starts working for the wealthy Park family. Soon, all of them find a way to work within the same household and start living a parasitic life.', 3398 => '', 3399 => '', 3400 => '', 3401 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 3402 => 'This supports the hypothesis statement of greed in richer groups in society, the example for this is at the end when the guy avoiding tax debt starts stabbing people and the father of the Parks family demands the Kim’s to toss the car keys so they can make a safe getaway just for his family rather than everyone else.', 3403 => '', 3404 => '', 3405 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 3406 => 'This source is useful because it has many scenes which supports the hypothesis statement that I made. ', 3407 => '', 3408 => '', 3409 => '', 3410 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 3411 => 'There’s a special connection American audiences have with Parasite. While taking place in a foreign country, it is still very relatable. It speaks to our societal structure. It speaks to the gap between the lower and upper classes. It speaks to all of our inner desires for wealth and respect. Parasite speaks to the realities of a Capitalistic society, and Americans know full well what life is like under Capitalism.', 3412 => '', 3413 => '', 3414 => '', 3415 => '', 3416 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 3417 => '', 3418 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 3419 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 3420 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 3421 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 3422 => 'My understanding of the movie is that it shows how the different classes in society treat each other as you had closer to the end of the film the rich family only care for themselves, another example with when the poor family had to fake their ranking in the groups of society by saying they had qualifications and other certificates to help them get jobs in these posh families ', 3423 => '', 3424 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 3425 => '', 3426 => '', 3427 => '', 3428 => '', 3429 => '', 3430 => '', 3431 => '', 3432 => '', 3433 => 'Source #2', 3434 => 'Title: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed', 3435 => '', 3436 => '', 3437 => 'Type of source: Blog', 3438 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 3439 => 'URL or publication details: The Driving Force Of Capitalism Is Empathy, Not Greed ', 3440 => 'Date Published: September 2nd. 2019', 3441 => 'Date Accessed: 16/06/21', 3442 => 'Summary/What is it about: It talks about how capitalism doesn't cause greed but rather empathy among society, it shows examples of how self centered entrepreneurs don’t make it due to not being able to see their customers needs while being completely selfish, while the empathetic entrepreneurs make it since they listen for the needs of customers.', 3443 => '', 3444 => '', 3445 => '', 3446 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 3447 => 'This opposes my statement made which is does capitalism cause greed in higher groups of society ', 3448 => '', 3449 => '', 3450 => '', 3451 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? ', 3452 => 'It doesn't really help as it says capitalism is pushed by empathy rather than greed, with examples of how self centered people don't make it which doesn't really show capitalism,so it wouldn’t be helpful for my investigation ', 3453 => '', 3454 => '', 3455 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste):', 3456 => '', 3457 => '', 3458 => '', 3459 => '', 3460 => '', 3461 => '', 3462 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 3463 => '', 3464 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 3465 => '', 3466 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 3467 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 3468 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 3469 => '✔ Recent publication date ', 3470 => '☐ Older publication date ', 3471 => '☐ No publication date ', 3472 => '✔ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 3473 => '☐ Has author’s name', 3474 => '☐No author', 3475 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 3476 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 3477 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 3478 => '✔ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 3479 => '', 3480 => '', 3481 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 3482 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 3483 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 3484 => '', 3485 => '', 3486 => '', 3487 => '', 3488 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 3489 => '✔ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 3490 => '', 3491 => '', 3492 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 3493 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 3494 => '', 3495 => '', 3496 => '', 3497 => '', 3498 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 3499 => 'I believe this source is reliable because many bais checkers say the information is mostly factual and is only slightly skewed to the right on their political views. The writer of the article is also a well known writer which makes it reliable also its written by a professional in the field of topic , even though it is an opinion piece.', 3500 => '', 3501 => '', 3502 => '', 3503 => '', 3504 => '', 3505 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 3506 => '', 3507 => '', 3508 => '', 3509 => '', 3510 => '', 3511 => '', 3512 => '', 3513 => '', 3514 => '', 3515 => '', 3516 => 'Source #3', 3517 => 'Title: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist', 3518 => '', 3519 => '', 3520 => 'Type of source: ', 3521 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 3522 => 'URL or publication details: The Problem Isn't That People Are Greedy—It's That They're Capitalist ', 3523 => 'Date Published: September 19 2020', 3524 => 'Date Accessed: 18 June 2021', 3525 => 'Summary/What is it about', 3526 => 'This text is about how competition is the beating heart to capitalism, with them saying that each capitalist wants to make a greater profit than their neighbour to show they are the bigger man.', 3527 => '', 3528 => '', 3529 => '', 3530 => '', 3531 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 3532 => 'This source does support my stance as it says in a way that greed is a main factor for capitalist in the society', 3533 => '', 3534 => '', 3535 => '', 3536 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 3537 => 'This information is helpful as helps with my one question of does capitalism cause greed as they mention that rather people being labeled greedy they are just capitalist want to only focus on themselves become big ', 3538 => '', 3539 => '', 3540 => '', 3541 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 3542 => '', 3543 => '', 3544 => '', 3545 => '', 3546 => '', 3547 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 3548 => '', 3549 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 3550 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 3551 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 3552 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 3553 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 3554 => '☐ Older publication date ', 3555 => '☐ No publication date ', 3556 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 3557 => '☐ Has author’s name', 3558 => '☐No author', 3559 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 3560 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 3561 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 3562 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 3563 => '', 3564 => '', 3565 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 3566 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 3567 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 3568 => '', 3569 => '', 3570 => '', 3571 => '', 3572 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 3573 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 3574 => '', 3575 => '', 3576 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 3577 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 3578 => '', 3579 => '', 3580 => '', 3581 => '', 3582 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: I believe that this source is reliable since the author of the article (Hadas Thier) specialises in politics but there is a issue as she writes for big companies who are extremely liberal skewed which will make the reader see the point from a completely different perspective to how others may see it.', 3583 => '', 3584 => '', 3585 => '', 3586 => '', 3587 => '', 3588 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 3589 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 3590 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 3591 => '', 3592 => '', 3593 => '', 3594 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 3595 => '', 3596 => '', 3597 => '', 3598 => '', 3599 => '', 3600 => '', 3601 => '', 3602 => 'Source #4', 3603 => 'Title: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?', 3604 => '', 3605 => '', 3606 => '', 3607 => 'Type of source: Blog', 3608 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 3609 => 'URL or publication details: Bible Verses About Money: What Does The Bible Have To Say About Our Financial Lives?', 3610 => 'Date Published: 24 August 2020', 3611 => 'Date Accessed: 22 June 2021', 3612 => 'Summary/What is it about', 3613 => 'This article talks about examples of greed that's been taken out of the bible like giving money and always putting others ahead of you. The blog mainly consists of quoted text out of the bible that then are looked into with a deeper meaning', 3614 => '', 3615 => '', 3616 => '', 3617 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 3618 => 'This supports as it shows many examples of greed which comes into place with capitalism and greed.', 3619 => '', 3620 => '', 3621 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why? ', 3622 => 'It’s somewhat relevant as it doesn't help so much with any questions but it does show how greed ruins people and how they talk in the bible about how to stay away from greed and temptation.', 3623 => '', 3624 => '', 3625 => '', 3626 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 3627 => '', 3628 => '1 Corinthians 5:11 But now I am writing to you that you must not associate with anyone who calls himself a brother but is sexually immoral or greedy, an idolater or a slanderer, a drunkard or a swindler. With such a man do not even eat.', 3629 => '', 3630 => '', 3631 => '', 3632 => '', 3633 => '', 3634 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 3635 => '', 3636 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 3637 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 3638 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 3639 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 3640 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 3641 => '☐ Older publication date ', 3642 => '☐ No publication date ', 3643 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 3644 => '☐ Has author’s name', 3645 => '☐No author', 3646 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 3647 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 3648 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 3649 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 3650 => '', 3651 => '', 3652 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 3653 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 3654 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 3655 => '', 3656 => '', 3657 => '', 3658 => '', 3659 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 3660 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 3661 => '', 3662 => '', 3663 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 3664 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 3665 => '', 3666 => '', 3667 => '', 3668 => '', 3669 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: It is reliable since the quotes and information is out of the bible which helps with the reliability of the source, the article quotes a lot of verses to help with the explaining of it too.', 3670 => '', 3671 => '', 3672 => '', 3673 => '', 3674 => '', 3675 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 3676 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 3677 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 3678 => '', 3679 => '', 3680 => '', 3681 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 3682 => '', 3683 => '', 3684 => '', 3685 => '', 3686 => '', 3687 => '', 3688 => '', 3689 => 'Source #5', 3690 => 'Title: ', 3691 => '', 3692 => '', 3693 => 'Type of source: ', 3694 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 3695 => 'URL or publication details: ', 3696 => 'Date Published: ', 3697 => 'Date Accessed: ', 3698 => 'Summary/What is it about', 3699 => '', 3700 => '', 3701 => '', 3702 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 3703 => '', 3704 => '', 3705 => '', 3706 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 3707 => '', 3708 => '', 3709 => '', 3710 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 3711 => '', 3712 => '', 3713 => '', 3714 => '', 3715 => '', 3716 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 3717 => '', 3718 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 3719 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 3720 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 3721 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 3722 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 3723 => '☐ Older publication date ', 3724 => '☐ No publication date ', 3725 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 3726 => '☐ Has author’s name', 3727 => '☐No author', 3728 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 3729 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 3730 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 3731 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 3732 => '', 3733 => '', 3734 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 3735 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 3736 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 3737 => '', 3738 => '', 3739 => '', 3740 => '', 3741 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 3742 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 3743 => '', 3744 => '', 3745 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 3746 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 3747 => '', 3748 => '', 3749 => '', 3750 => '', 3751 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 3752 => '', 3753 => '', 3754 => '', 3755 => '', 3756 => '', 3757 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 3758 => 'Reliability: Fiction texts', 3759 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 3760 => '', 3761 => '', 3762 => '', 3763 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 3764 => '', 3765 => '', 3766 => '', 3767 => '', 3768 => '', 3769 => '', 3770 => '', 3771 => 'Source #6', 3772 => 'Title: ', 3773 => 'Type of source: ', 3774 => 'Eg: Online PDF Document - book - magazine article - blog - Wikipedia entry - YouTube video', 3775 => 'URL or publication details: ', 3776 => 'Date Published: ', 3777 => 'Date Accessed: ', 3778 => 'Summary/What is it about', 3779 => '', 3780 => '', 3781 => '', 3782 => 'Does this source support or oppose your stance on the topic?', 3783 => '', 3784 => '', 3785 => '', 3786 => 'Is it useful/relevant to your research? Why?', 3787 => '', 3788 => '', 3789 => '', 3790 => 'Relevant Information / Important Points, Quotes etc. (copy/paste): ', 3791 => '', 3792 => '', 3793 => '', 3794 => '', 3795 => '', 3796 => 'Reliability: delete the table that does not apply', 3797 => '', 3798 => 'Reliability: Non-fiction texts ', 3799 => '(Probably) More reliable ', 3800 => '(Probably) Less reliable ', 3801 => '(Possibly) Unreliable ', 3802 => '☐ Recent publication date ', 3803 => '☐ Older publication date ', 3804 => '☐ No publication date ', 3805 => '☐ Has author’s name, author is expert or journalist (check Wikipedia or the ‘About’ page of a site) ', 3806 => '☐ Has author’s name', 3807 => '☐No author', 3808 => '☐ Provides citations/footnotes as evidence, or quotes from experts', 3809 => '☐ Provides external links as evidence, or refers to sources that are easy to find', 3810 => '☐ Provides internal links (other pages in site) or no references ', 3811 => '☐ Comes from a site such as .ac, .edu, .gov or .govt, or a reputable* news site', 3812 => '', 3813 => '', 3814 => '☐ Comes from a biased* news site or is labelled as opinion or comment', 3815 => '☐Is not labelled as opinion but is obviously biased', 3816 => '☐ Easy to find similar articles', 3817 => '', 3818 => '', 3819 => '', 3820 => '', 3821 => '☐Hard to find similar articles, except for reposts of same article', 3822 => '☐ Site is well laid out, easy to navigate', 3823 => '', 3824 => '', 3825 => '☐ Site is poorly designed', 3826 => '☐ Sourced through EPIC or JSTOR', 3827 => '', 3828 => '', 3829 => '', 3830 => '', 3831 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because: ', 3832 => '', 3833 => '', 3834 => '', 3835 => '', 3836 => '', 3837 => '*check Wikipedia or this infographic. ', 3838 => 'Reliability: Fiction textshttps://www.adfontesmedia.com/', 3839 => '“Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth”: Write 1-3 sentences demonstrating your understanding of the background to the text (culture, time, belief system), the author’s relevant experience/ research and the particular audience/ purpose for which it was created.', 3840 => '', 3841 => '', 3842 => '', 3843 => 'I believe this source is/is not reliable because:' ]
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[ 0 => '{{short description|System of rules to convert information into another form or representation}}', 1 => '{{Other uses}}', 2 => '{{Redirect|Encoding|other uses|Encoding (disambiguation)}}', 3 => '{{For|[[Wikipedia:Naming conventions (technical restrictions)#Forbidden characters|technical reasons]], "Code#01 Bad Girl" and "Code#02 Pretty Pretty" redirect here. For the EPs by Ladies' Code|Code 01 Bad Girl|Code 02 Pretty Pretty}}', 4 => '{{More citations needed|date=March 2010}}', 5 => 'In [[communication]]s and [[information processing]], '''code''' is a system of rules to convert [[information]]—such as a [[letter (alphabet)|letter]], [[word]], sound, image, or [[gesture]]—into another form, sometimes [[data compression|shortened]] or [[secrecy|secret]], for communication through a [[communication channel]] or storage in a [[storage medium]]. An early example is an invention of [[language]], which enabled a person, through [[speech]], to communicate what they thought, saw, heard, or felt to others. But speech limits the range of communication to the distance a voice can carry and limits the audience to those present when the speech is uttered. The invention of [[writing]], which converted spoken language into [[visual system|visual]] [[symbol]]s, extended the range of communication across space and [[time]].', 6 => 'The process of '''encoding''' converts information from a [[communication source|source]] into symbols for communication or storage. '''Decoding''' is the reverse process, converting code symbols back into a form that the recipient understands, such as English or/and Spanish.', 7 => 'One reason for coding is to enable communication in places where ordinary [[plain language]], spoken or written, is difficult or impossible. For example, [[semaphore]], where the configuration of [[Flag semaphore|flags]] held by a signaler or the arms of a [[semaphore line|semaphore tower]] encodes parts of the message, typically individual letters, and numbers. Another person standing a great distance away can interpret the flags and reproduce the words sent.', 8 => '== Theory ==', 9 => '{{main|Coding theory}}', 10 => 'In [[information theory]] and [[computer science]], a code is usually considered as an [[algorithm]] that uniquely represents [[symbols]] from some source [[alphabet (computer science)|alphabet]], by ''encoded'' strings, which may be in some other target alphabet. An extension of the code for representing sequences of symbols over the source alphabet is obtained by concatenating the encoded strings.', 11 => 'Before giving a mathematically precise definition, this is a brief example. The mapping', 12 => ':<math>C = \{\, a\mapsto 0, b\mapsto 01, c\mapsto 011\,\}</math>', 13 => 'is a code, whose source alphabet is the set <math>\{a,b,c\}</math> and whose target alphabet is the set <math>\{0,1\}</math>. Using the extension of the code, the encoded string 0011001 can be grouped into codewords as 0 011 0 01, and these in turn can be decoded to the sequence of source symbols ''acab''.', 14 => 'Using terms from [[formal language theory]], the precise mathematical definition of this concept is as follows: let S and T be two finite sets, called the source and target [[alphabet (computer science)|alphabets]], respectively. A '''code''' <math>C:\, S \to T^*</math> is a [[total function]] mapping each symbol from S to a [[String (computer science)|sequence of symbols]] over T. The '''extension''' <math>C'</math> of <math>C</math>, is a [[Homomorphism#Homomorphisms and e-free homomorphisms in formal language theory|homomorphism]] of <math>S^*</math> into <math>T^*</math>, which naturally maps each sequence of source symbols to a sequence of target symbols.', 15 => '=== Variable-length codes ===', 16 => '{{main|Variable-length code}}', 17 => 'In this section, we consider codes that encode each source (clear text) character by a [[code word]] from some dictionary, and [[concatenation]] of such code words give us an encoded string. Variable-length codes are especially useful when clear text characters have different probabilities; see also [[entropy encoding]].', 18 => 'A ''prefix code'' is a code with the "prefix property": there is no valid code word in the system that is a [[prefix (computer science)|prefix]] (start) of any other valid code word in the set. [[Huffman coding]] is the most known algorithm for deriving prefix codes. Prefix codes are widely referred to as "Huffman codes" even when the code was not produced by a Huffman algorithm. Other examples of prefix codes are [[country calling codes]], the country and publisher parts of [[ISBN]]s, and the Secondary Synchronization Codes used in the [[UMTS]] [[W-CDMA|WCDMA]] 3G Wireless Standard.', 19 => '[[Kraft's inequality]] characterizes the sets of codeword lengths that are possible in a prefix code. Virtually any uniquely decodable one-to-many code, not necessarily a prefix one, must satisfy Kraft's inequality.', 20 => '=== Error-correcting codes ===', 21 => '{{main|Error detection and correction}}', 22 => '{{see also|Block code}}', 23 => 'Codes may also be used to represent data in a way more resistant to errors in transmission or storage. This so-called [[Error detection and correction|error-correcting code]] works by including carefully crafted redundancy with the stored (or transmitted) data. Examples include [[Hamming code]]s, [[Reed–Solomon]], [[Reed–Muller code|Reed–Muller]], [[Walsh–Hadamard code|Walsh–Hadamard]], [[BCH code|Bose–Chaudhuri–Hochquenghem]], [[Turbo code|Turbo]], [[Binary Golay code|Golay]], [[Goppa code|Goppa]], [[low-density parity-check code]]s, and [[space–time code]]s.', 24 => 'Error detecting codes can be optimised to detect ''burst errors'', or ''random errors''.', 25 => '== Examples ==', 26 => '=== Codes in communication used for brevity ===', 27 => 'A cable code replaces words (e.g. ''ship'' or ''invoice'') with shorter words, allowing the same information to be sent with fewer [[character (computing)|characters]], more quickly, and less expensively.', 28 => 'Codes can be used for brevity. When [[Telegraphy|telegraph]] messages were the state of the art in rapid long-distance communication, elaborate systems of [[commercial code (communications)|commercial codes]] that encoded complete phrases into single mouths (commonly five-minute groups) were developed, so that telegraphers became conversant with such "words" as ''BYOXO'' ("Are you trying to weasel out of our deal?"), ''LIOUY'' ("Why do you not answer my question?"), ''BMULD'' ("You're a skunk!"), or ''AYYLU'' ("Not clearly coded, repeat more clearly."). [[Code word]]s were chosen for various reasons: [[length]], [[pronounceability]], etc. Meanings were chosen to fit perceived needs: commercial negotiations, military terms for military codes, diplomatic terms for diplomatic codes, any and all of the preceding for espionage codes. Codebooks and codebook publishers proliferated, including one run as a front for the American [[Black Chamber]] run by [[Herbert Yardley]] between the First and Second World Wars. The purpose of most of these codes was to save on cable costs. The use of data coding for [[data compression]] predates the computer era; an early example is the telegraph [[Morse code]] where more-frequently used characters have shorter representations. Techniques such as [[Huffman coding]] are now used by computer-based [[algorithm]]s to compress large data files into a more compact form for storage or transmission.', 29 => '=== Character encodings ===', 30 => '{{Main|Character encoding}}', 31 => 'Character encodings are representations of textual data. A given character encoding may be associated with a specific character set (the collection of characters which it can represent), though some character sets have multiple character encodings and vice versa. Character encodings may be broadly grouped according to the number of bytes required to represent a single character: there are single-byte encodings, [[Wide character|multibyte]] (also called wide) encodings, and [[Variable-width encoding|variable-width]] (also called variable-length) encodings. The earliest character encodings were single-byte, the best-known example of which is [[ASCII]]. ASCII remains in use today, for example in [[HTTP headers]]. However, single-byte encodings cannot model character sets with more than 256 characters. Scripts that require large character sets such as [[CJK|Chinese, Japanese and Korean]] must be represented with multibyte encodings. Early multibyte encodings were fixed-length, meaning that although each character was represented by more than one byte, all characters used the same number of bytes ("word length"), making them suitable for decoding with a lookup table. The final group, variable-width encodings, is a subset of multibyte encodings. These use more complex encoding and decoding logic to efficiently represent large character sets while keeping the representations of more commonly used characters shorter or maintaining backward compatibility properties. This group includes [[UTF-8]], an encoding of the [[Unicode]] character set; UTF-8 is the most common encoding of text media on the Internet.', 32 => '=== Genetic code ===', 33 => '{{Main|Genetic code}}', 34 => '[[Biology|Biological]] organisms contain genetic material that is used to control their function and development. This is [[DNA]], which contains units named [[gene]]s from which [[messenger RNA]] is derived. This in turn produces [[protein]]s through a [[genetic code]] in which a series of triplets ([[codon]]s) of four possible [[nucleotides]] can be translated into one of twenty possible [[amino acid]]s. A sequence of codons results in a corresponding sequence of amino acids that form a protein molecule; a type of codon called a [[stop codon]] signals the end of the sequence.', 35 => '===Gödel code===', 36 => 'In [[mathematics]], a [[Gödel code]] was the basis for the proof of [[Gödel]]'s [[incompleteness theorem]]. Here, the idea was to map [[mathematical notation]] to a [[natural number]] (using a [[Gödel numbering]]).', 37 => '=== Other ===', 38 => 'There are codes using colors, like [[traffic lights]], the [[Electronic color code|color code]] employed to mark the nominal value of the [[Resistor|electrical resistor]]s or that of the trashcans devoted to specific types of garbage (paper, glass, organic, etc.).', 39 => 'In [[marketing]], [[coupon]] codes can be used for a financial discount or rebate when purchasing a product from a (usual internet) retailer.', 40 => 'In military environments, specific sounds with the [[cornet]] are used for different uses: to mark some moments of the day, to command the infantry on the battlefield, etc.', 41 => 'Communication systems for sensory impairments, such as [[sign language]] for deaf people and [[braille]] for blind people, are based on movement or tactile codes.', 42 => '[[Sheet music|Musical scores]] are the most common way to encode [[music]].', 43 => 'Specific games have their own code systems to record the matches, e.g. [[chess notation]].', 44 => '=== Cryptography ===', 45 => 'In the [[history of cryptography]], [[Code (cryptography)|codes]] were once common for ensuring the confidentiality of communications, although [[cipher]]s are now used instead.', 46 => 'Secret codes intended to obscure the real messages, ranging from serious (mainly [[espionage]] in military, diplomacy, business, etc.) to trivial (romance, games) can be any kind of imaginative encoding: [[Language of flowers|flowers]], game cards, clothes, fans, hats, melodies, birds, etc., in which the sole requirement is the pre-agreement on the meaning by both the sender and the receiver.', 47 => '== Other examples ==', 48 => 'Other examples of encoding include:', 49 => '*Encoding (in [[cognition]]) - a basic perceptual process of interpreting incoming stimuli; technically speaking, it is a complex, multi-stage process of converting relatively objective sensory input (e.g., light, sound) into a subjectively meaningful experience.', 50 => '*A [[content format]] - a specific encoding format for converting a specific type of [[data]] to [[information]].', 51 => '*Text encoding uses a [[markup language]] to tag the structure and other features of a text to facilitate processing by computers. (See also [[Text Encoding Initiative]].)', 52 => '*[[Semantics encoding]] of formal language A informal language B is a method of representing all terms (e.g. programs or descriptions) of language A using language B.', 53 => '*[[Data compression]] transforms a signal into a code optimized for [[Transmission (telecommunications)|transmission]] or [[data storage device|storage]], generally done with a [[codec]].', 54 => '*[[Neural encoding]] - the way in which information is represented in [[neuron]]s.', 55 => '*[[Memory encoding]] - the process of converting sensations into memories.', 56 => '*[[Television encoding]]: [[NTSC]], [[PAL]] and [[SECAM]]', 57 => 'Other examples of decoding include:', 58 => '* [[Parsing|Decoding (computer science)]]', 59 => '* [[Decoding methods]], methods in communication theory for decoding codewords sent over a noisy channel', 60 => '* [[Digital signal processing]], the study of signals in a digital representation and the processing methods of these signals', 61 => '* [[Digital-to-analog converter]], the use of analog circuit for decoding operations', 62 => '* Word decoding, the use of [[phonics]] to decipher print patterns and translate them into the sounds of language', 63 => '==Codes and acronyms==', 64 => '[[Acronym]]s and abbreviations can be considered codes, and in a sense, all [[language]]s and [[writing system]]s are codes for human thought.', 65 => '[[International Air Transport Association airport code]]s are three-letter codes used to designate airports and used for [[bag tag]]s. [[Station code]]s are similarly used on railways but are usually national, so the same code can be used for different stations if they are in different countries.', 66 => 'Occasionally, a code word achieves an independent existence (and meaning) while the original equivalent phrase is forgotten or at least no longer has the precise meaning attributed to the code word. For example, '30' was widely used in [[journalism]] to mean "end of story", and has been used in [[-30-|other contexts]] to signify "the end".<ref>Kogan, Hadass [http://www.ajr.org/Article.asp?id=4408 "So Why Not 29"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101212101705/http://ajr.org/Article.asp?id=4408 |date=2010-12-12 }} American Journalism Review. Retrieved 2012-07-03.</ref>', 67 => '<ref>{{cite web', 68 => ' |title = WESTERN UNION "92 CODE" & WOOD'S "TELEGRAPHIC NUMERALS"', 69 => ' |publisher = Signal Corps Association', 70 => ' |year = 1996', 71 => ' |url = http://www.civilwarsignals.org/pages/tele/wurules1866/92code.html', 72 => ' |access-date = 2012-07-03', 73 => ' |url-status = live', 74 => ' |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120509135118/http://www.civilwarsignals.org/pages/tele/wurules1866/92code.html', 75 => ' |archive-date = 2012-05-09', 76 => '}}</ref>', 77 => '== See also ==', 78 => '{{Commons category|Codes}}', 79 => '* [[Asemic writing]]', 80 => '* [[Cipher]]', 81 => '* [[Code (semiotics)]]', 82 => '* [[Equipment codes]]', 83 => '* [[Quantum error correction]]', 84 => '* [[Semiotics]]', 85 => '* [[Universal language]]', 86 => '== References ==', 87 => '{{reflist}}', 88 => '* {{cite journal |last1=Chevance |first1=Fabienne |title=Case for the genetic code as a triplet of triplets |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America |volume=114 |issue=18 |pages=4745–4750 |pmc=5422812 |year=2017 |pmid=28416671 |doi=10.1073/pnas.1614896114 }}', 89 => '[[Category:Encodings]]', 90 => '[[Category:Signal processing]]' ]
Whether or not the change was made through a Tor exit node (tor_exit_node)
false
Unix timestamp of change (timestamp)
1624587189