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Media Literacy: Check your own claim!

Practice makes perfect

Use the tips throughout this LibGuide to check your own claim, or use one of the claims listed below for practice.  Remember, fake news articles may fall under multiple categories and might even mix in a few facts amid their falsehoods.

Select a claim to examine

Thanks to KT Lowe, Indiana University East Campus Library.

Fact Checking

CrashCourse. "The Facts about Fact Checking: Crash Course Navigating Digital Information #2." YouTube, 15 Jan. 2019, www.youtube.com/watch?v=EZsaA0w_0z0. Accessed 28 Apr. 2020.

Things to think about

Who is behind this information?
What is the evidence for their claims?
What do other sources say about the organization and their claims?

 

 

CrashCourse. "The Facts About Fact Checking: Crash Course Navigating Digital Information #2." YouTube, 15 Jan. 2019, www.youtube.com/watch?v=EZsaA0w_0z0. Accessed 21 Apr. 2019.

 

Other tips for fact checking and avoiding fake news

  1. When you open up a news article in your browser, open a second, empty tab.  Use that second window to look up claims, author credentials and organizations that you come across in the article.
  2. Fake news spans across all kinds of media - printed and online articles, podcasts, YouTube videos, radio shows, even still images. 
  3. As Mad-Eye Moody said in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, "Constant Vigilance!"  Always be ready to fact check.
  4. Even the best researchers will be fooled once in a while.  If you find yourself fooled by a fake news story, use your experience as a learning tool.

Thanks to KT Lowe, Indiana University East Campus Library.