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Fact Checking for Journalistsand how to make a FOIA request
Presented in June 2005 at the Allied Media Conference
by Librarians of Radical Referencewww.radicalreference.info
and Free Government Information
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fact checking 101*Someone other than the reporter filing the story verifies all factual
material prior to publication so that:
• The work can’t be dismissed as propaganda or rumor• Legal risks associated with printing inaccuracies can be avoided• An even more interesting story might be discovered• Sources are kept happy• Embarrassment—or worse—can be avoided• Determine and highlight all facts in a story• Go beyond spelling and dates—look for causal links, attributions, reporter
assumptions, facts contained within quotes, and memories• Evaluate sources used by the reporter• Confirm everything, using multiple sources for controversial facts
*Much of this information can be found in an easy to read book, The Fact Checker's Bible, by Sarah Harrison Smith. Random House 2004.
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before meeting with your fact-checker
• Organize sources used to write the story– Contact info for interviewees– Website addresses– Copies of documentation
• Highlight potential areas of concern
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meeting with the fact-checker
• Discuss sources and potential areas of concern
• Identify which sources were used for which part of the story
• Keep copies of your documentation for yourself
• Quotes—checked or not?
• Remain available to your fact-checker
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post-check
• Discuss the story a final time.
• The fact checker will be concerned with accuracy. Suggestions about reworking the story will relate solely to factual issues.
• Unless the editorial policy dictates otherwise, it's your name on the story, and your final call.
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research tips• Use the telephone• Search engine tips & tricks: advanced search. Google isn't the only one out there:
– Librarians Internet Index– Dogpile– Amazon– Yahoo (the results will differ from Google's)– Teoma (the results will differ from Google's)
• Websites– Advocacy (FAIR, Prison Activist Resource Center) – Business (Monsanto, The New York Times Company)– News (IndyMedia, Fox News)– Informational (American Heritage Dictionary, Critical Mass)– Personal (Makezine, Street Librarian)
• Databases– Subscription
• Commercial (Academic Universe, MasterFILE Premier) Lots available from your local public library.
• Scholarly (PAIS International, Alternative Press Index)– Free(ish)
• Commercial (New York Times, the Guardian)• Government (American Factfinder, Library of Congress American Memory)
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bonus: how to make a FOIA request
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free expensive databases from your public library
• Commercial subscription databases are freely available and accessible from home to NYPL card holders and at branch and research libraries to anyone who walks in
• Access government and legal information, newspapers and magazine, statistical and business information, and alternative indexes
• www.nypl.org/databases
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accessing the databases
• Arranged alphabetically, by subject, and by document type (e.g., full-text)
• Icons indicate from where databases can be accessed
• Check other area libraries and their database collections:
• Ask a reference librarian
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evaluation criteria
• Authority (auspices)
• Accuracy
• Objectivity (perspective, bias)
• Currency (time, not money)
• Coverage (scope, mission)
Much of the evaluation section was inspired by or taken directly from Evaluating Web Resources
by Jan Alexander and Marsha Ann Tatewhich can be found at
http://www2.widener.edu/Wolfgram-Memorial-Library/webevaluation/webeval.htm
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radical reference
• www.radicalreference.info
--Ask a reference question
--Links to radical information sources
--Search archive of questions• Handout
http://radicalreference.info/amc/fact_handout• Presentation
http://radicalreference.info/amc/fact_presentation
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contact us
[email protected] this presentation on the web:
http://radicalreference.info/amc/fact_presentationhttp://radicalreference.info/amc/fact_handout
Look for us in the streets during demonstrations. We’ll be wearing stuff with the Radical Reference logo.