Skip to Main Content

ENGL 100/105 (Lawrence)

How to be a Fact-checker

There are a few simple things that can help you when you're selecting sources to use in your college projects:

  1. Determine authority and understand what it means.
  2. Use lateral reading.
  3. Look for links and cross-references.
  4. Avoid confirmation bias.

SIFT Method

StopWhen you initially encounter a source of information and start to read it—stop. Ask yourself whether you know and trust the author, publisher, publication, or website and use the fact-checking moves that follow, to get a better sense of what you’re looking at. In other words, don’t read, share, or use the source in your research until you know what it is, and you can verify it is reliable.

This is a particularly important step, considering what we know about social media, news organizations, and other digital platforms purposely promote sensational, divisive, and outrage-inducing content that emotionally hijacks our attention in order to keep us “engaged” with their sites (clicking, liking, commenting, sharing). Stop and check your emotions before engaging!

After stopping at your resource, continue with the other three steps of the SIFT method.

InvestigateYou don’t have to do a three-hour investigation into a source before you engage with it. But if you’re reading a piece on economics, and the author is a Nobel prize-winning economist, that would be useful information. Likewise, if you’re watching a video on the many benefits of milk consumption, you would want to be aware if the video was produced by the dairy industry. This doesn’t mean the Nobel economist will always be right and that the dairy industry can’t ever be trusted. But knowing the expertise and agenda of the person who created the source is crucial to your interpretation of the information provided.

When investigating a source, fact-checkers read “laterally” across many websites, rather than digging deep (reading “vertically”) into the one source they are evaluating. That is, they don’t spend much time on the source itself, but instead they quickly get off the page and see what others have said about the source. They open up many tabs in their browser, piecing together different bits of information from across the web to get a better picture of the source they’re investigating.

FindWhat if the source you find is low-quality, or you can’t determine if it is reliable or not? Perhaps  you don’t really care about the source—you care about the claim that source is making. You want to know if it is true or false. You want to know if it represents a consensus viewpoint, or if it is the subject of much disagreement. A common example of this is a meme you might encounter on social media. The random person or group who posted the meme may be less important than the quote or claim the meme makes.

Your best strategy in this case might actually be to find a better source altogether, to look for other coverage that includes trusted reporting or analysis on that same claim. Rather than relying on the source that you initially found, you can trade up for a higher quality source.

The point is that you’re not wedded to using that initial source. We have the internet! You can go out and find a better source, and invest your time there.

TraceMuch of what we find on the internet has been stripped of context. Maybe there’s a video of a fight between two people with Person A as the aggressor. But what happened before that? What was clipped out of the video and what stayed in? Maybe there’s a picture that seems real but the caption could be misleading. Maybe a claim is made about a new medical treatment based on a research finding—but you’re not certain if the cited research paper actually said that. The people who re-report these stories either get things wrong by mistake, or, in some cases, they are intentionally misleading us.

In these cases you will want to trace the claim, quote, or media back to the source, so you can see it in its original context and get a sense of whether the version you saw was accurately presented.

Keep in mind as you are evaluating the resources you find:

  • Determine the  authority of what you're looking at. Was it created for personal or professional reasons? Is it journalistic or academic in nature? What can you tell about who created it and why?
  • Use lateral reading. If you're unsure about a publication, organization, or website, check Wikipedia and Google to see if you can learn anything more about who they are, what they do, and their motivations and overall trustworthiness.
  • Look for bias and understand the context. Is there anything overtly biased about what you're looking at? Do you understand the context for why the information was created and is being shared?
  • Be careful about confirmation bias. Just because it fits the parameters of what you need  or says what you want it to say shouldn't make it the first choice for your paper or project. Review the other questions above, and make sure that it can stand on it's own as a resource,
  • Don't accept it because it's easy. Always ask yourself: is there something better?

Parts of the lectures in this module have been remixed from Introduction to College Research by Walter D. Butler, Aloha Sargent, and Kelsey Smith,  licensed under CC BY 4.0, and SIFT text and graphics adapted from “SIFT (The Four Moves)” by Mike Caulfield, licensed under CC BY 4.0