Framing and Bias
Framing and Bias
Section titled “Framing and Bias”Definition
Section titled “Definition”Framing and bias refer to the way language, sequence, emphasis, and comparison can shape how visitors understand an object or topic.
Why It Matters
Section titled “Why It Matters”Even accurate facts can be framed in ways that overstate certainty, imply judgment, or guide visitors toward unsupported conclusions.
How to Read It
Section titled “How to Read It”- Ask what the label emphasizes first.
- Notice whether alternatives are ignored.
- Check whether a comparison is fair and relevant.
- Look for words that imply certainty without evidence.
Teaching Use
Section titled “Teaching Use”Ask students to identify one phrase that changes how a visitor might feel about an object.
Related Terms
Section titled “Related Terms”Public Sources
Section titled “Public Sources”Public sources will be added as this entry is reviewed and expanded.
Scope Note
Section titled “Scope Note”This entry explains interpretive wording and bias. It does not provide political, legal, cultural ownership, or institutional policy advice.