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FACT-CHECKING GUIDE: FACT-CHECKING HELP

FACT-CHECKING GUIDE(S)

 

BE SMART

Do not be fooled by fake news!! It is incredibly easy to manipulate and spread information, so you should always use critical thinking skills and question what you read, see, and hear.

FAKE NEWS

  • Defined: "Fake News" is the deliberate falsification and fabrication of news-based information.  
  • Though Fake News can appear in traditional magazines and/or newspapers, it appears most often and spreads most rapidly via social media (TikTok, Twitter, Instagram, etc.).

HUMAN NATURE

All human beings are biased, and fake news knows how to target and twist that bias to its desired end by creating misleading information or outright false information. 

TYPES OF FAKE NEWS

  • Satire or Parody: This type of fake news makes fun of the truth or mocks the truth typically for entertainment purposes. In this type of fake news, the author typically did not set out to cause harm. 
  • Misleading Information: This type of fake news frames a real/existing news story in some misleading way with the purpose to intentionally deceive. 
  • 100% Fake News: This type of fake news is a story where all of the information is false and was intentionally made up with the purpose to deceive and cause harm. 
  • Manipulated News: This type of fake news is when information has been manipulated, typically through text or images that have been doctored, which is now very easy via AI with the intention of deceiving the reader.  

CREDITS: Mark Aaron Polger @ College of Staten Island

How To Spot Fake News - FactCheck.org

FACT-CHECKING WORKSHEET - PROQUEST

FACT CHECKING WEBSITES

While you should never rely on fact checker sites as your single sources of verification, they should be included as a routine part of your fact checking process. Fact-Checker sites strive to confirm, deny, or verify questionable information and conspiracy theories.  

The following sites are some of the most used and reliable at the moment:

FACT-CHECKING VIDEOS