Stage 1 of 5: ASK

AKUUU
AKUUU CHALLENGES

Challenge: The Great Wall Debate — Level 7

Level 7 – The Strategist General 10 min
⚡ Challenge

The Great Wall Debate

Level 7 — The Strategist | Ages 12–14 | History | ⏱️ 10–12 minutes

This is a timed credibility challenge. Two historians describe the same event. One is biased. Your job: detect the bias, name the technique, and explain which account is more trustworthy.

Time Remaining 12:00

📋 Challenge Rules

  • You have 12 minutes to read both sources and decide
  • Both sources describe the same event — the building of a massive wall
  • One source is more credible. One contains historical bias
  • You must identify WHICH is biased, WHAT technique they used, and WHY the other is more trustworthy
  • Bonus: Explain what the biased source LEFT OUT

📜 The Evidence

Event: A powerful emperor ordered the construction of a massive wall to protect the northern border. Thousands of workers labored for years. Many died.

📜
Source A — Imperial Chronicle
Written by court historians, 10 years after the wall was finished

“The Emperor, in his infinite wisdom, commanded the greatest wall ever built to shield the civilized world from northern barbarians. The people labored with joy and pride, knowing they served a divine ruler. The wall stands as eternal proof of the Emperor’s glory. Rebellious tribes who resisted were justly punished. Peace now reigns forever.”

✉️
Source B — Letter from a Worker
Found buried near the wall, written by a laborer named Wei, dated during construction

“We have worked 300 days. My brother fell from the mountain last month. They did not stop building. The guards say we will be freed when the wall is done, but new workers arrive every week. The rice is moldy. My hands bleed. I heard some men talking of running away to the north. I am too weak to run.”

🐥

Think: Who wrote each source? When? Why? A source written BY the powerful to praise themselves is different from a source written BY the powerless in secret. Ask: Who benefits if I believe this?

🔍 Credibility Checklist

Source A — Check
  • Written when? _____________
  • Written by whom? _____________
  • Why was it written? _____________
  • Who benefits? _____________
  • What emotion does it use? _____________
Source B — Check
  • Written when? _____________
  • Written by whom? _____________
  • Why was it written? _____________
  • Who benefits? _____________
  • What emotion does it use? _____________

🎯 Your Verdict

Which source is MORE CREDIBLE?

More credible source:

My reasoning (use evidence from the text):

Which source is BIASED? Name the bias technique:

Biased source:
Bias technique (e.g., glorification, omission, loaded words):
Example from the text:

What did the biased source LEAVE OUT that changes the story?

🚀 Bonus: Rewrite the Chronicle

Rewrite Source A’s first sentence to remove the bias. Keep the facts, lose the loaded language.

Original: “The Emperor, in his infinite wisdom, commanded the greatest wall ever built to shield the civilized world from northern barbarians.”
My neutral version:

⭐ Challenge Reflection

The trick that almost fooled me:
I check for bias by looking for:
I will use this skill when:

🧠 Thinking Pause

  • I asked WHO wrote the source and WHY before believing it
  • I spotted loaded words that create emotion without adding facts
  • I noticed what was LEFT OUT, not just what was said