Evaluating Sources: SIFT & PICK, RADAR, & ACT UP
- SIFT/PICK
- RADAR Framework
- Scholarly, Popular, or Trade?
- Primary, Secondary, or Tertiary?
- Peer Reviewed Articles through UlrichsWeb
- Evaluating Privilege: ACT UP
- Pushing Against Privilege
- Evaluating News
- Bursting your Filter Bubble
- Data privacy 'GUT Check'
Online Fact-Checking Sites
- Global Fact-Checking SitesCreated by the Reporters’ Lab at Duke University’s DeWitt Wallace Center for Media & Democracy, this database of global fact-checking sites allows you to locate sites around the world using a map or a list arranged by continent.
- FactCheck.orgA nonpartisan, nonprofit “consumer advocate” for voters that aims to reduce the level of deception and confusion in U.S. politics.
- PolitiFactA non-partisan fact-checking website that researches specific statements made by United States politicians and rates them for accuracy.
- SnopesConducts fact-checking and investigative reporting on viral rumors, folklore, satire, political topics, and more. Links to the evidence on which conclusions are based.
- Better News Fact CheckingProvides expert fact checking advice and tutorials, from the American Press Institute’s Accountability Journalism and Fact-Checking Project, which aims to increase and improve fact-checking and other accountability journalism practices.
- First Draft Verifying Online InformationThis guide introduces the five pillars of verification (provenance, source, date, location, and motivation) and covers using digital investigative tricks and tools to verify online information.
Free Interactive Ebooks & Online Courses
- Check, Please! Starter CourseThis self-paced online course covers fact and source-checking using the SIFT method. Includes five lessons, taking about 30 minutes each.
- CTRL-F: Find the FactsIncludes videos and activities that help you
develop the habits and skills needed to evaluate online information to determine what to trust. Covers three key "lateral reading" strategies that fact-checkers use: Investigate the Source; Check the Claim; and Trace the Information. - Introduction to College ResearchThis free ebook covers key concepts in information literacy to support the research process. Topics include the online information environment; information source types; research topics; effective search strategies for library and web searches; the ethical use of information; and citation.
- Web Literacy for Student Fact-CheckersThis free ebook helps you develop your web literacy to get closer to the truth on the web more quickly. Topics include: finding the source of viral content; assessing the reputation of scientific journals; verifying the source of a Tweet; finding deleted pages; checking Wikipedia pages for recent vandalism; searching the text of books to verify a quote; etc..
Strategies for Evaluating Sources: SIFT & PICK (box was formerly P.R.O.V.E.N.)
What Makes an Information Source "Good?"
“Good” sources include those that provide complete, current, factual information, and/or credible arguments based on the information creator’s original research, expertise, and/or use of other reliable sources.
Whether a source is a good choice for you depends on your information needs and how you plan to use the source.
Evaluating Sources Using Lateral & Vertical Reading
The SIFT* & PICK approach to evaluating sources helps you select quality sources by practicing:
Lateral Reading (SIFT): fact-checking by examining other sources and internet fact-checking tools; and
Vertical Reading (PICK): examining the source itself to decide whether it is the best choice for your needs.
*The SIFT method was created by Mike Caulfield under a CC BY 4.0 International License.
SIFT
|
PICK
|
SIFT & PICK by Ellen Carey is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. Last updated 4/11/23.
- SIFT & PICK Fact Checking & Source EvaluationA printable version of the SIFT & PICK approach to evaluating sources using lateral reading (SIFT) to fact check a source and vertical reading (PICK) to decide whether it is the best source for your needs.
- Last Updated: Oct 28, 2024 1:47 PM
- URL: https://campusguides.lib.utah.edu/RADAR
- Print Page