Ergo's adventures. in thinking ?!?!! THINKING. Words by Peter McOwan, Paul Curzon and Jane Waite Pictures by you

Similar documents
Ergo s adventures in thinking

Section I. Quotations

Important: Fallacies: a mistake in reasoning. Fallacies: Linguistic Confusion. Linguistic Confusion Fallacies. General Categories of Fallacies

To kill a mockingbird by Harper Lee Logic and Literary Elements

4. Rhetorical Analysis

Some Basic Concepts. Highlights of Chapter 1, 2, 3.

I can t write a poem : instant poetry! 14 lines, following a format of excuses, one lined up after another.

PHI Inductive Logic Lecture 2. Informal Fallacies

RHYME. The repetition of accented vowel sounds and all sounds following them in words that are close together in the poem.

UNIT 13: STORYTIME (4 Periods)

Pronouns and possessive adjectives

F31 Homework GRAMMAR REFERNCE - UNIT 6 EXERCISES

Colfe s School. 11+ Entrance Exam. English Sample Paper

Building Mental Muscle & Growing the Mind through Logic Exercises: Lesson 5b Material Fallacies Answer sheet

Material and Formal Fallacies. from Aristotle s On Sophistical Refutations

What is a logical fallacy?

Lesson 5: Story Structure

The girl is the tallest of the three.

INFORMAL FALLACIES. Engel, S. Morris With Good Reason: An introduction to Informal Fallacies. 6 th ed. Bedford.

expository/informative expository/informative

1. Reading: Robert Bott introduces himself, gives some personal information and then talks about his daily routine.

Fast speeds dramatic techniques

Do you believe dreams can tell us the future? Have you ever had a dream come true? Have you ever had a déjà vu?

CITY LG Nov 7 th /8 th

Anna is at her office today where a report about a pop concert. 5 On Friday Anna was at a concert to listen to a new group. Her brother phoned her.

3-40. Oi! Get off our Train

MIT Alumni Books Podcast The Proof and the Pudding

Past Continuous. 7. Match the words in the box with the pictures. Write 1 8 in the boxes. e f g h

ARGUMENT FROM AUTHORITY { OR ARGUMENT FROM f'alse AUTHORITY)

QUESTION - CUM - ANSWER PAPER : CLASS : 03

Imagining. 2. Choose endings: Next, students must drag and drop the correct endings into each square.

Explorers 6 Teacher s notes for the Comprehension Test: Treasure Island

Errors in Logic Often Found in Persuasive Texts

Re(t)con. written by. Moustache de Plume

Logical Fallacies. Arguing Incorrectly

Following Directions

Fallacies and Paradoxes

Logical Fallacies. Good or Bad?

A QUALITY IMPROVEMENT PROCESS IN, HEMLOCK DRYING

Is it a bad thing if children tell lies? Scientists don't think so. This short video explains why.

EEP Family Connect. It s Fall! Let s Take A Walk! Late October, early November, 2016

ener How N AICE: G OT t (8004) o Argue Paper

Mastering Six Troublesome Verbs. Why are these verbs troublesome? Lie / Lay Sit / Set Rise / Raise Review A Review B

Anxiety. Written by. Simon K. Parker

EXCERPT FROM WILLING OBJECTS BY SERAFINA DONAHUE

Famous Quotations from Alice in Wonderland

Lexie World (The Three Lost Kids, #1) Chapter 1- Where My Socks Disappear

First Edition Printed by Friesens Corporation in Altona, MB, Canada. February 2017, Job #230345

JETSET LEVEL FIVE WRITING TEST SAMPLE PAPER TIME ALLOWED 90 MINUTES

LearnEnglish Elementary Podcast Series 02 Episode 08

Explorers 4 Teacher s notes for the Comprehension Test: The Adventures of Odysseus

Angelica Rinebarger 4/26/13. Lesson Plan

Answers: Tone Station

PRESENT TENSES. PRESENT SIMPLE PRESENT CONTINUOUS PRESENT PERFECT and PRESENT PERFECT CONTINUOUS

PRESENT TENSES. PRESENT SIMPLE PRESENT CONTINUOUS PRESENT PERFECT and PRESENT PERFECT CONTINUOUS

Little Jackie receives her Call to Adventure

Preview of Literary Terms 41-45

FYI. Hats and Gloves are Important. Website Wiz. Slate Hill Student Newspaper. January 29, 2018

Longman English for Pre-school Book 4

More please! More! More! Save the Whales, Screw the Shrimp Summary. In Joy Williams essay Save the Whales, Screw the Shrimp, published in 2001, she

Dinosaurs. B. Answer the questions in Hebrew/Arabic. 1. How do scientists know that dinosaurs once lived? 2. Where does the name dinosaur come from?

Word Log. Word I don t know: Page: What I think it means: Word I don t know: Page: What I think it means: Word I don t know: Page:

For more material and information, please visit Tai Lieu Du Hoc at American English Idioms.

Camptown Races (Stephen Foster, 1850)

Learning to Fly. You bin playing my DS? You broke mine! Stanley lived with his dad and older brother Kyle.

Voc o abu b lary Poetry

Tyr s Day, November 10: Bounded In a Nutshell EQ: Does Hamlet accept cogito, ergo sum as true?

1 Adam went out at 8:00. (get up) 2 He took the bus to the sports centre. (ride) 3 His swimming lesson finished at 10:30. (begin)

Introducing the Read-Aloud

The Three Elements of Persuasion: Ethos, Logos, Pathos

Lesson 1 Mixed Present Tenses

THEME THE SEARCH FOR MEANING

Who.s Doing All the Work? Teaching Toward Independence and Proficiency. Dorothy

Ill. The tall, fair and stout visitor talks a lot whereas Mr. Nath simply listens. But he cannot imagine that Nath is a crook.

Bell Work How To 1. Always LABEL you bell work: example: Bell Work #1

Jacob and Noah. his first stop: Main Street. As he carries his ladder he hums the tune to a song. At

CHAPTER CONTENT CONTENTS

4-H Science Investigation Script

Who am I? CHAPTER ONE

Rhetorical Analysis. AP Seminar

Before reading. King of the pumpkins. Preparation task. Stories King of the pumpkins

Octaves and the Major-Minor Tonal System

Three Acts of the Mind

Session 12 POLEMICAL TRICKS AND RHETORICAL PLOYS

Level A2 LAAS ENGLISH LANGUAGE EXAMINATIONS DECEMBER Certificate Recognised by ICC NAME... LANGUAGE ATTAINMENT ASSESSMENT SYSTEM INSTRUCTIONS

The artists' artist: Children's illustrators

BACHELOR'S DEGREE PROGRAMME Term-End Examination December, ELECTIVE COURSE : ENGLISH-1

Logical Fallacies Appeal to/from Authority Fallacy

Explorations in Creative Reading and Writing

Song Lyrics. The Dover House Singers invite you to an. Wednesday 28th March pm St. Margaret s Church Hall, Putney Park Lane, SW15 5HU

THE FALLACIES OF RHETORIC R H E T O R I C A L A N A L Y S I S B A C K G R O U N D I N F O R M A T I O N

A Prologue That Story-wise Is Out of Order

MLK s I Have a Dream speech is a great example. I have a dream that Is repeated often.

Methods for Memorizing lines for Performance

Argumentation and persuasion

2018 English Entrance Exam for Returnees

Alfred's Basic Piano Library Lesson Book, Bk 1A: Book & CD PDF

It is precisely in their minuteness that more universal significance is often found.

Word Fry Phrase. one by one. I had this. how is he for you

Objective of This Book

Transcription:

Ergo's adventures in thinking?!?!! THINKING Words by Peter McOwan, Paul Curzon and Jane Waite Pictures by you www.abitofcs4fn.org/ergo/ teachinglondoncomputing.org/ergo/

Here are seven poems about Ergo. In each poem Ergo is in a muddle. Can you explain why Ergo has made a thinking mistake each time? Draw a fun picture to go with each poem. Find notes for grown-ups at the end. Page 2

Draw Ergo in the mirror. You decide if Ergo is a person, robot, alien or something else all together. Page 3

All cats are grey Ergo thinks all cats are grey. Ergo s thought it all today. But Ergo's wrong as we will see. There is a black cat up that tree. Page 4

Draw Ergo outside being surprised by the black cat up a tree. Page 5

Heads and Tails Ergo tossed a coin to see How many heads could ever be. One dozen heads came down in turn, So heads again Ergo did spurn. But coins don't worry about their past, And heads again it dropped like last. Page 6

Draw Ergo tossing a coin and being shocked at getting another heads. Page 7

Rainy day Ergo was most sure to say Umbrellas cause the rain to stay. Each time I see them in the street, It s wet, with dark clouds and no heat. But sunny days showed it s not the case, As parasols the streets did grace. It's not umbrellas that cause the rain. Poor Ergo had to think again. Page 8

Draw a picture of Ergo on a rainy day. Did Ergo remember an umbrella? Page 9

Two wrongs Ergo says It s fine to lie. It's true because that older guy Tells tall tales almost every day. But two wrongs don't make right, folks say. Page 10

Draw Ergo looking sad because of someone lying on the TV. Page 11

Messy hair Ergo says That woman is wrong. Her hair is messy, I bet year long. But we know folk can still be right, Even if their hair s a sight. Page 12

Nora s c a f é Draw the woman with messy hair in the café, with Ergo listening to what she says. Page 13

The Earth is flat! They all chant that the Earth is flat And Ergo wants to go with that. But just because that's what they sing, That doesn't make it the right thing. Page 14

Draw a flat Earth on the whiteboard, then a round earth with Ergo pointing to it. Page 15

Forgotten friends I've forgotten all my friends from school. Each one and every, it's not cool. Then Ergo asks Remember me? Classmate, yes? So, no, you see? S C H O O L Page 16

Draw Ergo at school with books and pencils. Page 17

Short Notes for grown ups This beginner s book, explores how to avoid muddled thinking. Computer Scientist s use logic to help understand the world. This is a part of computational thinking and it is all about thinking clearly. It will prepare your child to solve problems by helping them think in a clear, logical way and draw correct conclusions from the information available. The seven poems, one a day for a week, will give your child an easy and fun introduction to common logical thinking mistakes or fallacies. Each poem and related drawing activity shows, by example, one of the following common logical errors. Contradiction There are two statements about cats that do not make sense together as they contradict each other. Ergo has up to that point only seen grey cats so believes that all cats are grey. The second example shows that at least one black cat exists. The black cat means that Ergo s original belief about all cats cannot be true. Just because you have not seen an example of something does not mean it does not exist. The Gambler s fallacy Throwing a fair coin, which has not been tampered with, should always be 50/50 heads or tails. What happened before cannot affect the next toss. This is called being 'statistically independent. Ergo should have known that the next toss was just as likely to be a head as a tail. The Causal fallacy A common mistake is to think there is a link between two things, when either there is actually no link at all, or the link works the other way round. Just because Ergo sees that umbrellas and rain happen together does not show which causes the other, if at all. Getting your umbrella out will not make it rain. It is the other way round: rain may make you get an umbrella out. Two wrongs do not make a right Ergo thinks that because some people do bad things, it means it is ok for everyone to do bad things. Grown-ups often use the proverb Two wrongs don't make a right to counter this. It does not make things better to do another wrong. This is called a fallacy of relevance. Page 18

The Ad hominem fallacy Ergo has decided to attack the woman rather than showing that her argument is wrong, but facts about what a speaker looks like have nothing to do with whether they are right or not. This is called the Ad hominem fallacy. Facts about a speaker might be used to understand a moral issue, but only if there is a direct link between the person s morals and what they are saying.if someone is known to lie then that might be used to help decide if they are lying now, for example. Bandwagon fallacy Ergo thinks that just because most people believe something, then that alone makes it true. This is also known as the Bandwagon fallacy or Argumentum ad populum (Latin for "appeal to the people ). Sometimes the one lone voice claiming something else is true is actually right. You should ask for evidence rather than rely on what other people think. Syllogism Syllogism are classical logical statements that allow two facts to be joined to prove a third. Here, the person thinks he has, sadly, forgotten all those he went to school with. This is called the major premise. Ergo then says he was a classmate at school. This is the minor premise. If you combine these two premises then you can correctly logically conclude from them using a Syllogism that the person does not know Ergo. However, the conclusion only follows if the statements are actually true. If they weren t actually at school together, or the person is mistaken and has not forgotten everyone, then the conclusion may not be true either. It is important to make sure basic facts are true before drawing conclusions from them. Shakespeare used fallacies based on Syllogisms to make jokes: Flavius: Have you forgot me, sir? Timon: Why dost ask that? I have forgot all men; Then, if thou grant'st thou'rt a man, I have forgot thee. (William Shakespeare, Timon of Athens, Act Four, scene 3 Find lots more computing support for teachers at http://teachinglondoncomputing.org/ Page 19

There is lots more Computing fun at www.abitofcs4fn.org and lots more for teachers at www.teachinglondoncomputing.org Page 20