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What is a fact? Weasel Words & Other Problems Where is opinion OK? Examples Identifying Fact and Opinion in Articles “How Facts Backfire” HOMEWORK Find answers to the “GET YOUR FACTS STRAIGHT” questions Unit Test Friday Well, that was disappointing.

What is a fact? ◦ Weasel Words & Other Problems ◦ Where is opinion OK? ◦ Examples ◦ Identifying Fact and Opinion in Articles “How Facts Backfire”

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Page 1: What is a fact? ◦ Weasel Words & Other Problems ◦ Where is opinion OK? ◦ Examples ◦ Identifying Fact and Opinion in Articles  “How Facts Backfire”

What is a fact? ◦ Weasel Words & Other Problems◦ Where is opinion OK?◦ Examples◦ Identifying Fact and Opinion in

Articles “How Facts Backfire”

HOMEWORK◦ Find answers to the “GET YOUR

FACTS STRAIGHT” questions◦ Unit Test Friday

Well, that was disappointing.

Page 2: What is a fact? ◦ Weasel Words & Other Problems ◦ Where is opinion OK? ◦ Examples ◦ Identifying Fact and Opinion in Articles  “How Facts Backfire”

“Credibility — more than news itself — is our stock in trade. An informative story is important. A dramatic story is desirable. An honest story is imperative.”

David Shaw, Los Angeles Times media writer

“What matters to me most is the truth. That’s the only thing that matters in journalism. The fundamental reason you’re reading journalism is because it’s truthful. Of course, everyone believes their own version of the truth. If you believe it, it’s true. So truth is in the same place it will always be: the hazy middle.”

Mervyn Keizer, chief of research at US Weekly

Page 3: What is a fact? ◦ Weasel Words & Other Problems ◦ Where is opinion OK? ◦ Examples ◦ Identifying Fact and Opinion in Articles  “How Facts Backfire”

Good reporters respect the integrity of facts. When you select them carefully and arrange them skillfully, you can communicate without inserting your own opinions. ◦ For instance, this fact by itself seems trivial: 28% of Americans

can name two freedoms granted by the First Amendment.◦ But now add this fact: 52% can name two members of “The

Simpsons” cartoon family. What logical unspoken conclusion can you make based of these

facts? Whether your conclusion is true or not is debatable, but this

does illustrates how things should work: The facts tell the story, and readers draw their own conclusions.

Page 4: What is a fact? ◦ Weasel Words & Other Problems ◦ Where is opinion OK? ◦ Examples ◦ Identifying Fact and Opinion in Articles  “How Facts Backfire”

Weasel words are words and phrases aimed at creating an impression that something specific and meaningful has been said, when in fact only a vague or ambiguous claim has been communicated.

EXAMPLES:◦ "A growing body of evidence..." (Where is the raw data for your

review?) ◦ "People say..." (Which people? How do they know?) ◦ "It has been claimed that..." (By whom, where, when?) ◦ "Clearly..." (As if the premise is undeniably true) ◦ "It stands to reason that..." (Again, as if the premise is

undeniably true)

Page 5: What is a fact? ◦ Weasel Words & Other Problems ◦ Where is opinion OK? ◦ Examples ◦ Identifying Fact and Opinion in Articles  “How Facts Backfire”

What happened? Well, nobody really knows yet. So what do you do

when you’ve got an A1 story to write on an important news event that you don’t know much about?

Break out the weasel words!

Page 7: What is a fact? ◦ Weasel Words & Other Problems ◦ Where is opinion OK? ◦ Examples ◦ Identifying Fact and Opinion in Articles  “How Facts Backfire”

Reporting the facts objectively can be difficult to uphold consistently.

Journalists who believe they are being fair or objective may give biased accounts—by reporting selectively, trusting too much to anecdote, or giving a partial explanation of actions.

Even in routine reporting, bias can creep into a story through a reporter's choice of facts to summarize, or through failure to check enough sources, hear and report dissenting voices, or seek fresh perspectives.

Page 8: What is a fact? ◦ Weasel Words & Other Problems ◦ Where is opinion OK? ◦ Examples ◦ Identifying Fact and Opinion in Articles  “How Facts Backfire”

Generally, publishers and consumers draw a distinction between reporting — "just the facts" — and opinion writing, often by restricting opinion columns to the editorial page and its facing or "op-ed" (opposite the editorials) page.

The distinction between reporting and opinion can break down. Some commentators have suggested there can sometimes be a blurring of opinion and fact.

Stories involving great amounts of interpretation are often labeled "news analysis," but still run in a paper's news columns.

Page 9: What is a fact? ◦ Weasel Words & Other Problems ◦ Where is opinion OK? ◦ Examples ◦ Identifying Fact and Opinion in Articles  “How Facts Backfire”

Journalism, it has been said, presents

a maximum of information with a

minimum of opinion, but

sometimes it is appropriate to add

emotion and attitude to news

writing.

Page 10: What is a fact? ◦ Weasel Words & Other Problems ◦ Where is opinion OK? ◦ Examples ◦ Identifying Fact and Opinion in Articles  “How Facts Backfire”
Page 11: What is a fact? ◦ Weasel Words & Other Problems ◦ Where is opinion OK? ◦ Examples ◦ Identifying Fact and Opinion in Articles  “How Facts Backfire”
Page 12: What is a fact? ◦ Weasel Words & Other Problems ◦ Where is opinion OK? ◦ Examples ◦ Identifying Fact and Opinion in Articles  “How Facts Backfire”
Page 13: What is a fact? ◦ Weasel Words & Other Problems ◦ Where is opinion OK? ◦ Examples ◦ Identifying Fact and Opinion in Articles  “How Facts Backfire”
Page 14: What is a fact? ◦ Weasel Words & Other Problems ◦ Where is opinion OK? ◦ Examples ◦ Identifying Fact and Opinion in Articles  “How Facts Backfire”
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HOW FACTS BACKFIREHOW FACTS BACKFIRE

1. Explain the troubling findings that researchers from the University of Michigan found out about the effect that facts have on misinformed people.

2. What effect can our beliefs have on facts? (6th paragraph)3. What does the author mean when he refers to the

“information glut”? What is the problem that it causes?4. Describe the study discussed on the top of the second page

about people’s beliefs on welfare. What does it illustrate?5. Describe the misinformation study where participants were

given mock news stories with false facts. What does it illustrate?

6. How does self-esteem affect one’s willingness to accept facts?

Page 16: What is a fact? ◦ Weasel Words & Other Problems ◦ Where is opinion OK? ◦ Examples ◦ Identifying Fact and Opinion in Articles  “How Facts Backfire”

1. In what country is the Amsterdam News printed?

2. Under the Articles of Confederation, who was the first U.S. president?

3. How much is admission to the Smithsonian Museums?

4. Where did the New York Giants play baseball? 5. What religion has the largest number of

adherents in the world?