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Published byErica Lesley Baldwin Modified over 9 years ago
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Identifying, Evaluating, & Using Sources Or: But Wikipedia is Cool!!!
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The Myth of No Bias: or Bill O’Reilly’s “No Spin Zone” is Impossible Bias- “an inclination to present or hold a partial perspective at the expense of (possibly equally valid) alternatives” which could lead to a distortion of the truth
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There is no pure giving of information The order of news stories shows a choice being made about what is most important The amount of print space given to a story reflects a bias towards its importance (and placement on page in a newspaper) Tone of voice, appearance, context can alter even the most seemingly neutral/unbiased giving of information.
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The Common Practice of Cropping to Send the Message You Want
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AND MORE! Every news outlet is owned by some corporation. GE owns NBC. Do you think reporting about energy issues is unbiased on NBC? Magazines have to sell to stay in business- does unbiasedness sell in today’s gossip focused, conflict obsessed world?
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News as Entertainment
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Away From Unbiased to Being Critically Informed Instead of looking for mythical “unbiased” sources, learn to look critically upon the sources you have. As for your own papers- of course you’re biased! You’re making an argument for your position! But that position can be informed, self-critiqued, and aware of alternate view points
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Popular Versus Scholarly Popular USA Today, New York Times, The Chronicle of Higher Education, Newsweek, Time, etc. General Audience Often utilize national polls Broad overviews with limited (or little) in-depth analysis
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Popular Versus Scholarly Scholarly CCCC, JAC, College English, Rhetoric Review, Kairos (in my field) “Experts” in the field of study review and approve the article before it can be published Authors are mostly PhDs (or soon-to- bes) in the field In depth exploration, analysis, and argumentation
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Scholarly Sources Found through library databases Not automatically reliable; however, you can rest assured the sources has been given a stamp of approval by someone knowledgeable. So the real work is figuring out if its helpful for your argument.
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Into the Interwebs! The Wild, Untamed Frontier of Open Access to Information and Potential Unreliability!!!!
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But it Really Kinda Is! Studies have found it nearly as reliable as the Encyclopedia Britannica (Nature Journal, 2005) Inaccuracies are caught and corrected within an average of six hours (Shirky, Here Comes Everyone, 2009) The Guardian (2005) had a panel of experts review the site: they concluded “Factually sound and correct, no glaring inaccuracies” and “Much useful information, including well selected links, making it possible to access much information quickly"
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Why (despite what you’ve probably been told) is it so accurate? Why then is it not considered a good source for academic writing? Do you know how to really use its deep functionality?
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Yay, Anybody Can Have a Page on the Internet!!! OMG No, Anybody Can Have a Page on the Internet!!!
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What techniques do you already know/use for accessing the reliability of a webpage?
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Domain names (but be careful!) Currency of Site/Last Update Name Recognition (but be careful) Site Authors (and research about them) Where does it link to?/Who Links to it? (alexa.com) Quality of page design Purpose (inform, sell a product, advocacy, entertainment) Usability
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How Does Google Work?
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Popularity Engine Google works off a link hierarchy. In essence, this means that sites will have a higher Google ranking based on how many other sites link to it. So if you only use the top Google hits when searching, you’re really only finding the popular stuff. Which begs the question, is popular necessarily better?
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