Wednesday, September 17, 2014

First Ledes: That Didn't Take Long

I'm sorry to say that with this assignment we had our first fatal fact errors, in which we offered inaccurate facts as defined by the syllabus.

And, in the interest of learning from each other this term, we will review each and every fatal so (hopefully) we can learn from the mistakes of others -- and avoid such mistakes ourselves, going forward.

In one case, we identified the school doing the marriage study as Florida State University, when in fact it was the University of Florida.

Yes, that's a fatal. And yes, the vast majority of fatals are something simple and basic that was overlooked.

Like day of the week. One of us wrote that the fatal fire happened last night, when in fact it happened Saturday night.

In another case, we wrote that a study looked at marriage distribution, when in fact it looked at marriage disruption. That, too, is a fatal, since distribution is not what the study considered.


(And this is an example of where spell check wouldn't have caught the mistake, because the unintended word is correctly spelled. This is why we need to use spell check as a supplement to -- but not a substitute for -- checking your story fact-by-fact with your own eyes, and checking against your notes -- or, in this case, against the information in your text.)


We get this idea that fatals are a HUGE error, but the reality is overwhelmingly fatals are simple mistakes. Like forgetting a word. That's why we urge such stringent fact-checking.

So please, be vigilant. After you finish writing be sure to double-check every name and age and title and date and, yes, city spellings.

No matter how well you did -- and the people who fataled did otherwise do well -- any fatal gets a 1.0 for the whole assignment. 

Seriously, it's that serious. Like I've said, journalism isn't about writing; it's about getting it right. Let's make sure we build good fact-checking habits so this is a rare circumstance.

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