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PETA Pressure

Summary

Persuading an audience requires intensive research and scrupulous fact-checking – or, you could
just figure out what your audience wants to hear and tell them that. Politicians, advertisers and
others with something to sell choose words and images that will appeal to their target audience,
enticing them to accept claims unquestioningly. Some of these manipulators, like the animal
activism site peta2.com, focus their attentions on teenagers and young adults. In this lesson,
students won’t check peta2’s factual accuracy, but will learn to spot their manipulative tactics
and why they should be skeptical about them.

Objectives

In this activity students will:

 Learn what a “target audience” is and how it can be manipulated.


 Identify some characteristics of a particular target audience.
 Check the peta2 Web site for tactics that exploit these characteristics.
 Understand the importance of detecting audience manipulation.

Background

PETA, the vocal animal rights organization, has been criticized for insensitive advertising and
for targeting children. The peta2.com Web site is aimed at teens and includes homework help,
testimonials from popular actors and musicians, and ways to earn activism “points” that can be
redeemed for merchandise. Whatever their positions on animal rights might be, students need to
be able to tune out propaganda and make their own decisions. This means understanding how
organizations, advertisers and politicians can appeal to particular audiences, and how to tell if
they’re part of a targeted audience.

Materials

1. peta2.com Web site.


2. Student handout #1: Web site worksheet.
3. Student handout #2: Questions on audience manipulation.
4. Student handout #3: “Don’t Be Fooled: A Process for Avoiding Deception.”

Procedure

Before class, make enough copies of student handouts #1 and #2 for small groups of 3 to 5
students. Make enough copies of handout #3 for each student.

In the full class, ask students some general questions:


 Are you more likely to buy products that are advertised to teenagers? (If they say “no,”
ask them to name some cool brands or products – they are likely to name the same
products, most of which will use teen-centric advertising.)
 Would you be more likely to support organizations or politicians that appealed directly to
teenagers?
 What reason might an organization have for tailoring its message to a particular
audience?

Now explain to the class that they will be examining some claims about peta2.com, a teen-
focused Web site coordinated by the organization People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals
(PETA). Explain that they should apply the five steps we have outlined in “Don’t Be Fooled: A
Process for Avoiding Deception.” Have them refer to their handout on this. Specifically, they
should:

 Keep an open mind. Don’t fall into the trap of thinking a claim is correct just because it
appeals to you or fits your biases.
 Ask the right questions. Examine whether a statement is purely factual or employs
language or images that will influence the audience. Ask whether the facts can be verified
or whether they are appealing to emotions or fears instead of logic.
 Cross-check. Look for more than one source of evidence before making up your mind.
 Consider the source. Think about which sources of information can be trusted, and what
makes a source trustworthy.
 Weigh the evidence. Do the facts support peta2’s message? Can peta2’s message stand
alone without manipulation?

Exercises

Exercise #1 – Keeping an open mind, asking the right questions

To the teacher: Emphasize to students the need to keep an open mind in their research and
analysis. People tend to accept any information that supports what they already believe and
reject information that conflicts with those beliefs, and they are particularly susceptible when the
presentation is tailored to appeal to them. Students need to make an effort to listen to all sides
and separate fact from propaganda to avoid accepting inaccurate information as truth.

For advertisers, organizations and politicians to be convincing, they need a keen knowledge of
their audience. For instance, a politician won’t get votes from 18-year-olds by focusing on Social
Security and Medicare benefits, or from 50-year-olds by setting up a MySpace page. If a
politician knows what motivates his or her audience, however, he or she can entice that audience
to believe and trust the politician unquestioningly. Avoiding deception means being aware of
audience manipulation.

Ask students to think about their class as an audience. First, solicit some demographic facts:
What is their age range? What is their occupation? Where do they live? Based on these facts, ask
the following questions:
 What motivates this audience?
 What does this audience fear?
 What do they desire? What are their goals?
 How do they spend their free time?
 Who does this audience trust?
 How might organizations and politicians appeal to an audience like this? What types of
words and images would they use?

Exercise #2 – Considering the source

To the teacher: Explain that determining whether an organization’s facts need cross-checking
can sometimes be difficult, especially if you are the target of propaganda. Sources may present
erroneous or misleading information in an appealing way in order to disarm people who might
otherwise be skeptical. Recognizing audience manipulation can help students determine whether
a source can be trusted.

Divide students into small groups of 3 to 5, and have them look at the peta2 Web site. Explain to
students that the peta2 site is intended to appeal to young people like them – its target audience is
the same audience they just discussed.

Allow them a few minutes to look through the site, and ask them to consider how convincing
they find it. Are they inclined to trust what PETA has to say?

After this initial examination, distribute handout #1 and have the groups comb through the site,
compiling two lists on the handout: one list of claims that could be cross-checked against other
sources, and one list of attempts to appeal to the particular audience. Have students check the
following when generating the second list:

 What words and phrases does the source choose?


 What images appear in the source?
 Who does the source present as an authority – someone the audience should listen to?
 What rewards and incentives are being offered?

You may want to assign separate starting points on the Web site to ensure that groups follow
different paths through the site.

After 5 to 10 minutes of searching, have students discuss their findings within their groups.
Distribute student handout #2 and have them discuss the following questions, which appear on
the handout:

 How does the source promise to allay the audience’s fears?


 How does the source promise to fulfill the audience’s desires and goals?
 How does the source motivate the audience?
 How does the source gain the audience’s trust?

Exercise #3 – Weighing the evidence


To the teacher: Help students understand what all the evidence means. They need to evaluate the
credibility of the sources of information presented and the tactics that these sources may be
using to manipulate them. They also need to understand the difference between “manipulative”
and “false.”

Discuss the findings with the full class. Use the following questions to guide discussion:

 Which list is longer – the list of checkable facts or the list of manipulative elements?
What does this mean?
 What techniques does the peta2 Web site employ in order to gain the trust of its
audience?
 As members of this audience, how well do you think these techniques work? Which ones
would be most effective? Would your peers be likely to accept peta2’s message based on
these tactics?
 What about you – are you likely to accept peta2’s message?
 How would you go about determining whether the checkable claims are true?

Emphasize that it’s important not to over-interpret these findings. (If your class has completed
the lesson plan on fallacies, you can explain that they should avoid the genetic fallacy). The
PETA site may be manipulative, but this does not mean that all of its claims are false – indeed,
students who cross-check their list of facts will find that, while the issues are complex and
multifaceted, many of the points are factually accurate. What the findings do mean is that
PETA’s claims require further scrutiny and that students must resist accepting these claims
unquestioningly.

Optional Exercises

Optional Exercise #1a

Bring in a variety of magazines and have students work in groups to determine the magazines’
target audiences. Remind students to look at article length, writing style and word choice,
images, and advertising as well as subject matter. Consider: How would the magazine’s
producers describe their target audience? What do they think motivates their audience? What do
they think their audience desires and fears, and how educated do they expect their audience to
be?

Optional Exercise #1b

Ask students to imagine that they are editors for one of the magazines they analyzed.
Considering that magazine’s audience, how would they present the issues that PETA addresses –
either animal rights in general or one of the sub-issues, such as veganism or wearing fur? What
words and phrases would they choose? What kinds of images, incentives or testimonials might
they offer?

Optional Exercise #2
If your class has completed the FactCheckED.org lesson plan on fallacies, have students search
for fallacious reasoning on the peta2 Web site. They should be able to find examples of red
herring, straw man, false cause, appeal to authority and vagueness, and indicators of suppressed
evidence and questionable use of statistics.

Discuss what it means for these fallacies to show up in a source that is so well-tailored to its
audience. Are such fallacies more likely to slip by unnoticed? Does the presence of fallacies
mean that PETA’s facts are false?

About the Author

Jessica Henig earned her BA in history of science from Smith College and her MA in English
from the University of Maryland. While at Maryland, she taught digital literature and rhetorical
writing. Prior to joining the Annenberg Public Policy Center in May 2007, she worked for the
National Academies Press. She has also worked for the National Institutes of Health and as a
freelance researcher and editor.

Correlation to National Standards

National Social Studies Standards

IV. Individual Development and Identity Social studies programs should include experiences
that provide for the study of individual development and identity.

X. Civic Ideals and Practices Social studies programs should include experiences that provide
for the study of the ideals, principles, and practices of citizenship in a democratic republic.

Essential Skills for Social Studies

Acquiring Information

A. Reading Skills

1. Comprehension

2. Vocabulary

B. Study Skills

1. Find Information

2. Arrange Information in Usable Forms

C. Reference & Information-Search Skills

3. Maps, Globes, Graphics


D. Technical Skills Unique to Electronic Devices

1. Computer

Organizing & Using Information

A. Thinking Skills

1. Classify Information

2. Interpret Information

3. Analyze Information

4. Summarize Information

5. Synthesize Information

6. Evaluate Information

B. Decision-Making Skills

C. Metacognitive Skills

Interpersonal Relationships & Social Participation

A. Personal Skills

C. Social and Political Participation Skills

Democratic Beliefs and Values

B. Freedoms of the Individual

C. Responsibilities of the Individual

National Mathematics Standards

Data Analysis and Probability Standard

National Education Technology Standards

2. Make informed choices among technology systems, resources, and services.


7. Routinely and efficiently use online information resources to meet needs for collaboration,
research, publication, communication, and productivity.

8. Select and apply technology tools for research, information analysis, problem solving, and
decision making in content learning.

Information Literacy Standards

Information Literacy

Standard 1 accesses information efficiently and effectively.

Standard 2 evaluates information critically and competently.

Standard 3 uses information accurately and creatively.

Standard 4 pursues information related to personal interests.

Social Responsibility

Standard 7 recognizes the importance of information to a democratic society.

Standard 8 practices ethical behavior in regard to information and information technology.

Standard 9 participates effectively in groups to pursue and generate information.

English Language Arts Standards

Standard 1. Students read a wide range of print and non-print texts to build an understanding of
texts, of themselves, and of the cultures of the United States and the world; to acquire new
information l to respond to the needs and demands of society and the workplace; and for personal
fulfillment. Among these texts are fiction and nonfiction, classic and contemporary works.

Standard 3. Students apply a wide range of strategies to comprehend, interpret, evaluate, and
appreciate texts. They draw on their prior experience, their interactions with other readers and
writers, their knowledge of the word meaning and of their texts, their word identification
strategies, and their understanding of textual features (e.g., sound-letter correspondence, sentence
structure, context, graphics).

Standard 4. Students adjust their use of spoken, written, and visual language (e.g., conventions,
style, vocabulary) to communicate effectively with a variety of audiences and for different
purposes.

Standard 5. Students employ a wide range of strategies as they write and use different writing
process elements appropriately to communicate with different audiences for a variety of
purposes.
Standard 6. Students apply knowledge of language structure, language conventions (e.g.,
spelling and punctuation), media techniques, figurative language, and genre to create, critique
and discuss print and non-print texts.

Standard 12. Students use spoken, written, and visual language to accomplish their own
purposes (e.g., for learning, enjoyment, persuasion, and the exchange of information).

National Science Standards

Science as Inquiry

Content Standard A

Science in Personal and Social Perspectives

Content Standard F

History and Nature of Science

Content Standard G

Health Education Standards

Health Education Standard 2 – Students will analyze the influence of family, peers, culture,
media, technology and other factors on health behaviors.

Health Education Standard 3 – Students will demonstrate the ability to access valid
information and products and services to enhance health.

Health Education Standard 5 – Students will demonstrate the ability to use decision-making
skills to enhance health.

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