fact vs fiction: who can you trust?

27
Fact vs Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

Upload: tambre

Post on 07-Jan-2016

30 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Fact vs Fiction: Who Can You Trust?. Don’t believe everything you read or see online!. Why is one news source more trustworthy than another?. Why believe one, not the other?. A journalist’s job is to gather information and verify whether it’s true—and then report on it. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Fact  vs  Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

Fact vs Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

Page 2: Fact  vs  Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

Don’t believe everything you read or see online!

Page 3: Fact  vs  Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

Why is one news source more trustworthy than another?

Page 4: Fact  vs  Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

Why believe one, not the other?

Page 5: Fact  vs  Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

A journalist’s job is to gather information and verify whether it’s

true—and then report on it.

Page 6: Fact  vs  Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

http://www.newseum.org/digital-classroom/video/getting-it-right/default.aspx

Page 7: Fact  vs  Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

Journalists and news outlets use this standard to

determine truth and accuracy: V.I.A.

Verification

Independence

Accountability

Page 8: Fact  vs  Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

Verification

This is the process that establishes whether something is true and accurate--or not.

Page 9: Fact  vs  Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

President Lisa has been shot in her office—is it true? How do you prove it?

Page 10: Fact  vs  Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

Find more than one good source:

• Go to the scene—her office.• Ask an official from the college to confirm.• Check with the police and hospital where she

was taken.• Interview eyewitnesses.• Call her family for comment.

Page 11: Fact  vs  Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

Independence

Journalists and news outlets must be free from the control, influence or support of interested parties, coupled with a conscious effort to set aside any pre-existing beliefs and a system of checks and balances.

Page 12: Fact  vs  Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

You work at Reuters News Service and the Dominican Republic Tourist Bureau offers you an all-expense paid trip to cover a new

resort in Samana. Should you take it?

Page 13: Fact  vs  Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

You’re a correspondent at ABC News and your husband becomes the governor of California. Should you stay in your job?

Page 14: Fact  vs  Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

You land an exclusive interview with an up-and-coming rapper for Vibe Magazine. He asks for $300. Should you pay?

Page 15: Fact  vs  Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

You’re a reporter at Businessweek. You get a hot tip to buy stock in Makerbot which makes 3 D

printers, so you purchase some shares. You then get assigned to write about the 3-D printer

craze. Should you?

Page 16: Fact  vs  Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

The rules?

• You can’t be paid to report a story. At the highest levels, you can’t pay someone to give you the story.

• You can’t write about your family or friends.• You can’t report on a company that you work

for, own stock in, have a vested interest in.• You can’t go on a trip that a company pays for

and then write about the destination.

Page 17: Fact  vs  Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

A journalist or legitimate news outlet must be accountable:

• Use named sources or have notes and recordings to prove that the reporting is correct.

• Use bylines so you know who wrote the story.• Make corrections if necessary—rather than

leave mistakes on the record.

Page 18: Fact  vs  Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

New York Times

Correction:

Page 19: Fact  vs  Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

What’s a good source of information?

Page 20: Fact  vs  Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

Good Sources for your research (never use just one!)

• Search engines—google, yahoo, msn etc.• News sites and content aggregators:

NYTimes.com, cnn.com, pbs.org, yahoo and google news.

• Databases: Nexis/Lexis• Government websites: city, state, federal• Independent, nonprofit organizations: American

Heart Association• A person’s own website.

Page 21: Fact  vs  Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

To be a smart consumer of news:

• 1. Ask yourself, what am I looking at?• 2. Think critically about the source?• 3. Learn to spot bias.• 4. Beware of wikipedia.• 5. Don’t allow yourself to be fooled.

Page 22: Fact  vs  Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

What am I looking at?

• Is it news? Opinion? A blog? Gossip? Advertising? Propaganda?

Page 23: Fact  vs  Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

Know the difference between news and opinion (these journalists are paid to be opinionated!)

Page 24: Fact  vs  Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

Think critically about the source.

• Who created the report? For what purpose? How was the information verified? Is it presented in a way that’s fair?

• FOLLOW THE $$$$$$$$

Page 25: Fact  vs  Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

Learn to spot bias.• Watch for loaded or inflammatory words.

Does the author have an agenda? The news outlet?

• Are all sides of the story presented? Did the subject respond?

Page 26: Fact  vs  Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

Journalists and news outlets use this

Verify information

Are Independence

Are Accountable to the public

Page 27: Fact  vs  Fiction: Who Can You Trust?

As a consumer of media, don’t forget to:

• 1. Ask yourself, what am I looking at?• 2. Think critically about the source?• 3. Learn to spot bias.• 4. Beware of wikipedia.• 5. Don’t allow yourself to be fooled.