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Avoiding Sensationalism

Avoiding sensationalism means refusing to present objects through shock, fear, disgust, or spectacle. It keeps interpretation focused on evidence, learning, context, and care.

Sensationalism can attract attention but damage trust. It shifts visitors away from observation and toward emotional reaction.

  • Watch for dramatic, horror-like, or shock-focused wording.
  • Ask whether the label teaches something specific.
  • Look for context, not just visual impact.
  • Check whether the object is framed as evidence rather than spectacle.

Compare two descriptions of the same object: one sensational and one educational. Ask students which better supports public learning and why.

Public sources will be added as this entry is reviewed and expanded.

This entry explains interpretive tone. It does not provide guidance for displaying sensitive materials without review, context, or appropriate boundaries.