Fake News verstehen About
Chapter 1 of 7
Chapter One

Is it true —
or just loud?
Understanding
fake news,
method by method.
Understanding
fake news in the
classroom.
— What fake news is, how false claims spread and how to check a claim before you believe it.

A headline that makes you furious. A photo that “proves” something shocking. A message in the family chat: “Share this before they delete it!” That is often fake news — a false claim dressed up as real news. It sounds worrying, but don’t worry: you can learn to check it. That’s exactly what we’ll do here, calmly, step by step.

Fake news is false or misleading content presented as a real news report — a fabricated headline, a misleading caption, or a genuine photo torn out of its context. This page leaves the gut feeling behind and works with checkable methods: distinguishing disinformation from misinformation, checking the source and reading laterally, verifying the date and context, and reading a headline carefully. Calm, without alarmism, with a focus on what you can actually do.

What’s true, what’s just loud? This lesson prepares students from Year 7 up to deal with fake news and disinformation: they practise checking sources, reading a headline carefully and handling upsetting content calmly. With a quiz, discussion prompts and an interactive headline-check game.

~ Take a breath. We’ll work through this together.
~ No panic — just checkable methods.
~ Suggested lesson: 2 school periods of 50 min each.
Chapter Two

What is
fake news?

Three kinds of
false information.

A definition
for the class.

Fake news is a false claim that pretends to be a real news report. Sometimes the whole story is made up; sometimes a real photo is simply used in the wrong context to support a false message. The aim is almost always the same: to make you believe something — and to share it.

“Fake news” is a loose, often politically loaded label. It is more precise to distinguish by intent: disinformation is false content spread deliberately to deceive; misinformation is false content passed on by mistake by people who believe it; and malinformation is true information used out of context to do harm. Most of what circulates as fake news is text and claims — fabricated headlines, misleading captions and real photos out of context.

Fake news is a false story that looks like real news. The trick: it is built to be believed and shared quickly. Sometimes the whole thing is invented, sometimes a real photo is used in the wrong place. Either way, it wants to fool you.

Important: not every mistake is fake news. A newspaper that gets a detail wrong and corrects it tomorrow is not lying to you on purpose. We mean false claims that are designed to mislead.

One more boundary worth drawing: fake news is not the same as a deepfake. Fake news is mostly about text and claims; a deepfake is media — image, voice or video — that AI has synthetically generated or altered. When the falsehood lies in synthetic media rather than in the words, our sister site on deepfakes is the place to look.

Fake news is a false claim dressed up as real news.
What matters is not how loud a claim is, but whether it is true — and who can be held to account for it.
Three terms, one difference — intent:
  • Disinformation — false content spread on purpose to deceive, manipulate or profit.
  • Misinformation — false content spread without bad intent, by people who believe it.
  • Malinformationtrue information used out of context to do harm (e.g. a private detail leaked to damage someone).
The same false post can be disinformation at its source and misinformation a few shares later. That’s why the question is never only “is it false?” but also “where did it start, and who benefits?”.
Common forms of fake news (text and claims):
  • Fabricated headlines and invented “reports” that imitate a news outlet.
  • A real photo with a misleading caption, or torn out of its original event.
  • True numbers framed misleadingly (a real statistic, a false conclusion).
  • Satire taken seriously once it leaves its original context.
The synthetic case — an AI-generated image or a cloned voice — is the domain of deepfakes, not of this page.
📚 Learning goals
  • You can tell fake news apart from an honest mistake.
  • You can explain the difference between disinformation and misinformation.
  • You can name three forms fake news takes (made-up story, misleading caption, photo out of context).
📖 Key terms
  • Fake news: a false claim presented as real news.
  • Disinformation: false content spread on purpose to deceive.
  • Misinformation: false content passed on by mistake, in good faith.
💡 Did you know…

The very same false post can change “type” as it travels: it starts as disinformation at the source and becomes misinformation the moment a friend shares it because they believed it.

❓ Quiz
What makes something fake news?

Answer B: “A false claim presented as if it were a real news report.”

A (a newspaper that corrects a mistake) is honest journalism. C (a clearly labelled opinion column) is not deception. Only B fits.

For the teacher — the three options to present: A: “A newspaper that corrects a mistake the next day.” / B: “A false claim presented as a real news report.” / C: “A clearly labelled opinion column.”

🎯 Extended learning goals (Bloom’s taxonomy)
  • L1 — Knowledge: students define fake news, disinformation and misinformation.
  • L2 — Comprehension: students explain why intent is the dividing line.
  • L3 — Application: students classify examples (mistake, satire, deliberate fake).
  • L4 — Analysis: students discuss how the same post can change “type” as it spreads.
⏱ Timing for this chapter (≈ 15 min)
  • 2 min: read the lead text together.
  • 3 min: collect the three terms on the board (with student guesses).
  • 2 min: briefly discuss the “Did you know…” fact.
  • 5 min: quiz in small groups — guess first, then reveal.
  • 3 min: discussion: “When is a wrong claim a mistake, and when is it fake news?”
💬 Discussion guide

Question: “Have you ever shared something and only later found out it wasn’t true?”

Follow-up question: “Does it matter whether the person who started it knew it was false?”

🤔 Anticipated student questions
  • “Is satire fake news?” — Not in itself; it becomes misleading only when taken out of context as if it were real.
  • “Is a faked photo fake news or a deepfake?” — A real photo used out of context is fake news; an AI-generated image is a deepfake (see our sister site).
Chapter Three

Why does it
spread so fast?

Feelings,
speed and reach.

Why we
pass it on.

A false claim doesn’t spread because it is true — it spreads because it makes us feel something. Anger, fear and outrage travel fastest. We see a furious headline, feel the jolt, and forward it before we’ve thought. The good news: the remedy is just as simple — a short pause before you share.

Two levers do most of the work: emotion and speed. Emotionally charged content raises the likelihood of sharing; speed undermines the moment of checking. On top of that come amplifying effects — but the mechanics of recommendation feeds are a topic of their own.

Fake news spreads through feelings and speed. What upsets us, we share faster — often without reading to the end. The trick to stopping it is simple: pause for a second before you forward.

The amplifying effects (in brief):
  • Algorithmic amplification: recommendation systems reward engagement — and outrage produces it. Reach can follow emotion, not truth.
  • Echo chambers: in groups that already share an opinion, a claim feels confirmed because everyone around repeats it.
  • Bots and coordinated accounts: automated or fake accounts can make a fringe claim look popular.
  • The lie–correction asymmetry: a false claim is often viral before a correction appears; the later fix reaches only a fraction.
The deeper mechanics of feeds and recommendation are a topic in their own right — covered on the sister site on social media. Here it is enough to know that emotion plus speed is what gives a false claim its first push.
📚 Learning goals
  • You can explain why emotions help false claims spread.
  • You understand why speed makes checking harder.
  • You can name the simplest remedy: pause before you share.
💡 Did you know…

Studies of social networks have found that false news often spreads faster and reaches more people than true news — largely because it is more surprising and more emotional.

❓ Quiz
What helps fake news spread the most?

Answer A: “Strong emotions like anger or fear.”

Calm, sober content (B) is shared less. The length of a text (C) barely matters. Emotion is the engine.

For the teacher — options: A: “Strong emotions like anger or fear.” / B: “A calm, sober tone.” / C: “The length of the article.”

⏱ Timing (≈ 10 min)
  • 3 min: collect feelings on the board: “What makes you want to share something instantly?”
  • 4 min: discuss the four amplifying effects briefly — without diving into feed mechanics.
  • 3 min: quiz + the rule “pause before you share”.
🔗 Cross-reference

Why platforms know so well what makes you angry is a question of data and profiling — explored on the sister site Datenschutz verstehen.

Chapter Four

Who is
telling me this?

Checking the
source & reading laterally.

Where does it
come from?

Before you believe a claim, ask one simple question: who is telling me this, and how would they know? Look for a name, an outlet, an imprint. If there is no source — or only a vague “people are saying” — that alone is a reason to be careful.

The single most useful skill against fake news is checking the source — and the most effective way to do it is lateral reading: instead of staying on a suspicious page and judging it by how trustworthy it looks, you leave it and find out elsewhere who is behind it. A polished design proves nothing; the verdict of independent sources about a source does.

The best question against fake news is: who says so, and how do they know? Look for the source. No name, no outlet, no imprint? Then be extra careful — and check somewhere else what this source actually is.

Lateral reading, step by step:
  1. Leave the page. Don’t judge a source by its own “About us”. Open new tabs.
  2. Search the source itself. What do independent outlets, encyclopaedias and fact-checkers say about this website or account?
  3. Check the claim, not the design. A professional look is easy to fake; a track record of independent reporting is not.
  4. Find the original. Trace a claim back to who first published it and on what evidence.
This is how professional fact-checkers work — and it is far faster than burrowing ever deeper into a single suspicious page (“vertical reading”).
Tells in the source itself:
  • No imprint / no author: reputable outlets say who is responsible. A missing imprint is a red flag.
  • Look-alike domains: an address that imitates a known outlet (an extra word, a different ending, a swapped letter) to borrow its credibility.
  • Anonymous “forwarded” chains: a message that has been copied and forwarded countless times, with no traceable origin.
  • Quote with no link: a dramatic statement attributed to someone, but with no verifiable source.
No source is not the same as the truth. If you can’t tell where it comes from, treat it as unconfirmed.
📚 Learning goals
  • You can explain what lateral reading means.
  • You know to check a source elsewhere, not by its own design.
  • You can recognise a look-alike domain.
❓ Quiz
What does lateral reading mean?

Answer C: “Leaving the page and checking in other tabs who is behind the source.”

A (trusting a nice design) is exactly the trap. B (reading the whole page very carefully) keeps you stuck on one source. C is the method professionals use.

Options: A: “Trusting a page because it looks professional.” / B: “Reading the whole page very carefully.” / C: “Leaving the page and checking elsewhere who is behind it.”

⏱ Timing (≈ 15 min) — a core skill
  • 4 min: show a suspicious-looking page on the projector and ask “would you trust it?”
  • 6 min: demonstrate lateral reading live — open new tabs, search the source itself.
  • 3 min: show a look-alike domain next to the real one.
  • 2 min: quiz + answers.
🖨 Mini worksheet
  1. Name two things a trustworthy source usually has (e.g. author, imprint).
  2. Explain in one sentence why you should check a source elsewhere.
  3. How could you tell a look-alike domain from the real outlet?
🔗 Cross-reference

Look-alike domains are also used in scams to push you towards a fake login or payment — covered on the sister site Sicher im Netz.

Chapter Five

A real photo —
wrong story.

Date, context &
the recycled photo.

Old photo,
new lie.

One of the most common tricks needs no faking at all: a genuine photo from years ago, or from a different place, is simply reused under a new, dramatic claim. The picture is real — the story it’s sold with is not. Two questions expose it: when was this taken, and does it really belong to this event?

A large share of fake news uses no manipulation of the image at all — it is an authentic photo, recycled out of context. The decisive checks are the publication date versus the event date, and a reverse image search that reveals where the picture first appeared. These “cheap fakes” are quick, cheap and effective — which is exactly why checking the context beats hunting for technical tells.

A favourite trick: take a real old photo and stick a new, shocking caption on it. The photo is genuine, but it’s from a different time or place. Ask: when is this from, and is it really about what they claim?

The reverse image search — for recycled real photos:
  1. Upload the image (or its address) to a search engine instead of searching for words.
  2. Read the results: where else does it appear, and — crucially — when did it first appear?
  3. Compare dates: if the photo is years older than the “breaking” story, it has been recycled.
  4. Check the place and the caption of the earliest appearance against the new claim.
Note the scope: this is the check for genuine photos used out of context. An AI-generated image is a different problem with different checks — that belongs to the deepfakes side.
“Cheap fakes” without any AI:
  • A real photo with a misleading caption.
  • A cropped image that hides the context (what’s just outside the frame?).
  • A slowed-down or sped-up clip that changes how someone seems to behave.
  • An old date passed off as today’s news.
These are cheaper and faster than any AI fake, and they spread just as well. That’s why the questions of date and context are usually more useful than searching for render artefacts.
A genuine photo can still tell a lie — if it’s placed in the wrong story.
📚 Learning goals
  • You understand that a real photo can be used out of context.
  • You can describe what a reverse image search reveals (first appearance, date).
  • You can name two “cheap fake” tricks.
❓ Quiz
What does a reverse image search reveal first of all?

Answer B: “Where and when the photo first appeared.”

It can’t read the photographer’s mind (A) and it doesn’t prove a claim true (C). It shows the image’s history — and that often exposes a recycled photo.

Options: A: “Who took the photo and why.” / B: “Where and when the photo first appeared.” / C: “Whether the claim in the caption is true.”

⏱ Timing (≈ 15 min)
  • 4 min: discuss “Can a real photo lie?” with the class.
  • 5 min: demonstrate a reverse image search on a neutral example image.
  • 4 min: collect “cheap fake” tricks on the board.
  • 2 min: quiz + answers.
💬 Discussion guide

Question: “If a photo is real, can the story around it still be false? How?”

🔗 Cross-reference

When the image itself is AI-generated rather than recycled, the checks change — that is the focus of the sister site Deepfakes verstehen.

Chapter Six

Real or
fake?

The headline
check.

Spot the
fake headline.

Now it’s your turn. Below you’ll see a few made-up posts and headlines, one after another. For each one, decide: real or fake? After every answer we’ll show you how to tell — calmly, with the trick that gives it away. Nothing can go wrong here; it’s all for practice.

Put the methods from the previous chapters into practice. Each round shows a fully fictional post; you judge real or fake, and the reveal names the exact technique — source check, date and context, lateral reading, or a warning sign in the wording — and points back to the relevant chapter.

Time to practise! For each made-up headline, choose “Real” or “Fake”. After every round you’ll see how to tell. Can you get all of them right? All the examples are invented — no real people or outlets.

📚 Learning goals
  • You can apply the checking methods to a concrete headline.
  • You can name at least three warning signs in the wording of a post.
  • You can explain your verdict — not just guess.
❓ Quiz
Which of these is most likely to be a real news headline?

Answer B: “Town council in Lindenroda approves a new cycle path — work to begin in autumn, the local gazette reports.”

A and C use pressure to share and sensational promises — classic fake-news tells. B names a place, a source and a sober, checkable fact.

Options: A: “SHOCK! Share THIS now before it’s deleted!” / B: “Town council approves a new cycle path — local gazette reports.” / C: “Doctors HATE this one trick — number 7 will amaze you!”

⏱ Timing (≈ 18 min) — the core of the lesson
  • 8 min: play the headline check on the projector; the class votes before each reveal.
  • 5 min: after each round, name the technique that gave it away (source, date, wording).
  • 3 min: collect the warning signs the class noticed on the board.
  • 2 min: quiz + answers.
🎯 Method tip

Let the class vote and justify before the reveal. Explaining the verdict trains careful checking far more than guessing does.

🖨 Worksheet link

The printable worksheet “Headlines under the magnifier” in the teacher pack mirrors this game on paper, with its own fully fictional headlines and an answer key.

Chapter Seven

What can
I do?

Calm, and
a plan.

Rules for
everyday life.

You don’t need to distrust everything now. The opposite, in fact: a calm eye and one small habit protect you well. When a post makes you feel a strong jolt, that feeling itself is the signal — pause, then check. That single beat is most of the work.

The right attitude is informed composure, not blanket suspicion. The strongest single habit is to treat your own emotional reaction as a trigger to check. A short, repeatable routine — pause, check the source, cross-check — handles the great majority of cases. Reputable fact-checking organisations are a tool for the stubborn ones.

You’re not helpless against fake news. A few simple rules keep you safe and calm — and just as important, they keep you from accidentally helping a false claim spread.

  • 1 · Pause. If a post makes you furious or afraid, that’s the moment to slow down.
  • 2 · Check the source. Who is saying this? Is there a name, an outlet, an imprint?
  • 3 · Cross-check. Do other, trustworthy outlets report the same thing? If not, don’t share it.
  • Stop — breathe — check. Before you believe or share anything.
  • Check the source. No name and no outlet? Be extra careful.
  • Look at several outlets. One page is not proof.
  • Don’t forward in doubt. When unsure, better not to share.
  • Ask an adult. A teacher, your parents, someone you trust.
  • Emotion is the trigger. Treat a strong reaction as a prompt to check, not to share.
  • Source before belief. Lateral reading beats judging a page by its looks.
  • Date and context. A reverse image search exposes recycled photos.
  • Cross-check. Several independent, reputable outlets — or it stays unconfirmed.
  • Use fact-checkers. Reputable fact-checking sites are a tool, not the whole answer.
AI-written fake news: generators make it cheap to mass-produce plausible-sounding articles, fake “reader comments” and whole look-alike news sites. The wording is smoother than before — but the checks don’t change: there is still a source to trace, a date to verify and independent outlets to cross-reference. Fluent text is not evidence; provenance is.
The liar’s dividend: once people know that anything can be faked, the bad actor’s real gift is the excuse it provides — genuine evidence can be waved away as “probably fake”. Fake news and synthetic media reinforce each other here. The defence is the same calm habit: judge by source and corroboration, not by how confidently something is asserted or denied. (When the disputed material is itself AI-generated media, the deepfakes site covers the forensic side.)
Fact-checking as a tool:
  • Independent fact-checking organisations publish checks of widely shared claims.
  • Use them to confirm or refute a stubborn claim — not as a substitute for your own quick check.
  • Apply lateral reading to fact-checkers too: who funds them, what is their track record?
Fake news works on feelings and speed — so calm and a short pause are your best defence. Today you’ve learned to ask three small questions before you believe a claim. That habit alone puts you ahead.
The wording gets smoother, the fakes get cheaper — but checking the source, the date and the context still works. Understanding beats alarmism: those who know the mechanics fall for it less, and can bring others along.
You’re now better prepared than most. Pass it on: explain the three-step check to friends and family. A calm, checking eye is the best defence against fake news.

🍎 For teachers: lesson kit

This page can be used as a complete double lesson on “Fake news & disinformation”. All content is free to use (CC BY 4.0) — please credit “Webagentur Hochmeir e.U. (webhoch.com)” as the source. The complete, printable teacher pack complements this page with worksheets (including answer keys), a class test with a marking rubric, homework at three levels, a parent-letter template and the curriculum links.

📄 To the printable teacher pack

📅 Suggestion: double lesson (90 min)

  1. 10 min — warm-up: “Have you ever shared something that turned out to be false?”
  2. 15 min — chapters 2 & 3: what fake news is and why it spreads so fast.
  3. 15 min — chapter 4: checking the source and lateral reading.
  4. 15 min — chapter 5: date, context and the reverse image search.
  5. 20 min — chapter 6: the headline check on the projector + warning signs.
  6. 15 min — chapter 7: the three-step check, AI fake news, fact-checkers, discussion “informed, not afraid”.

Differentiation: weaker groups stay in Simple mode; stronger ones switch to “In Detail” for lateral reading and AI fake news.

Common questions

Frequently asked questions

The most important questions about fake news — compact and easy to look up.

A quick reference on fake news. Answers are embedded in the FAQPage schema for search engines and AI assistants.

Fake news is a false or misleading claim presented as a real news report. It can be a fabricated headline, a misleading caption or a real photo torn out of its original context. The decisive factor is the intent: disinformation is spread deliberately to deceive, while misinformation is passed on by mistake by people who believe it.
No. Fake news is mainly about text: false claims, misleading headlines and real photos used out of context. A deepfake, by contrast, is media — image, voice or video — that AI has synthetically generated or altered. The two often work together, but the checks differ: for fake news you check the source, the date and the context; for synthetic media you look for AI artefacts. Our sister site on deepfakes covers the media side.
Disinformation is false content spread on purpose to deceive, manipulate or cause harm. Misinformation is false content spread without bad intent — by people who believe it is true and pass it on in good faith. The same false post can be disinformation at its source and misinformation a few shares later. A third term, malinformation, describes true information used out of context to do harm.
Pause before you believe or share it. Then check the source: who is publishing this, is there an imprint, and what do independent outlets say about that source (lateral reading)? Check the date and the context of any photo with a reverse image search. And cross-check: do several independent, reputable outlets report the same thing? A single, anonymous source is not proof.
Lateral reading means leaving a suspicious page and opening new tabs to find out who is behind it and what others say about it — instead of staying on the page and trusting how trustworthy it looks. A professional-looking site proves nothing; what matters is the verdict of independent sources about that source.
A reverse image search shows where a photo first appeared and in what context. With fake news, the photo is often genuine but old or from a completely different event — recycled to fit a new false story. The image search reveals the original date and place, exposing a recycled photo in seconds. For AI-generated images, the checks are different; the deepfakes site covers those.
Watch for a screaming headline that triggers strong emotions, pressure to share immediately, a missing or hidden source, an old or context-free date, and a promise that sounds too good or too outrageous to be true. A look-alike domain that imitates a known outlet is another classic tell. None of these alone proves a fake — but together they are a reason to pause and check.
Stay calm rather than reacting in alarm. Agree on a simple rule in the family chat: check before you forward. Use a quick three-step check — pause, check the source, cross-check several outlets. Reputable fact-checking organisations are a useful tool when something keeps circulating. And remember: forwarding a false claim, even in good faith, helps it spread.
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