Quantcast
Channel: SMU Voices
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 4

Searching for balanced election news? Ask a librarian.

0
0

Student studying on his laptop in Fondren Library Center, SMU

Trying to determine if that news or social media story you are reading is biased? Check your emotional response, says SMU Information Literacy Librarian Megan Heuer.

“A strong emotional response to a news story, positive or negative, is a sign that a story may need verification,” she says. Heuer regularly shares tips like this in her free public workshops on the SMU campus, “Finding Balanced News in a Biased World.”

For librarians, helping students and patrons understand how to evaluate sources of information has long been a key part of their mission. Their code of ethics supports intellectual freedom.

“Our personal beliefs do not impact the resources we collect or recommend” Heuer says. “Instead, professional librarians teach students and library patrons to develop information literacy – the ability to find and evaluate information, to understand how and why it is produced and to use it ethically.”

HEUER’S PRACTICAL TIPS FOR EVALUATING NEWS

Use fact-checking sites: When in doubt, verify stories on these sites – Snopes, FactCheck.org, Politifact, Hoax-Slayer, Truth or Fiction.

Conduct lateral searching instead of vertical searching: Scan a website, then open additional websites on the same topic seeking context and perspective. Don’t limit search to in-depth vertical analysis of one website.

Check age of domain: Use WHOIS to see when the web domain for the story was created. Be wary if the domain is brand new. It may have been created to host biased news.

Conduct a reverse image search: Use Google Images to see how an image has been used in the past and to confirm if the image originated with the story.

Beware of misleading media: Question selective sourcing, opinion-writing and advertising that masquerade as news, as well as quick-fix science news.

Recognize good reporting: Good reporting is ethical, represents multiple viewpoints, identifies sources and uses commonly accepted sources and authorities.

Is your news source biased? Several nonprofit organizations evaluate news bias and fact check news stories. To evaluate a news source or particular story, visit AllSides, Politifact, Factcheck or Media Bias/Fact Check.

— Nancy George


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 4

Latest Images

Trending Articles





Latest Images