During this
semester, we will review each and every serious fact error -- known as a
"fatal" -- in hopes of learning lessons on what kinds of mistakes are
common, and what we need to watch for and avoid.
Let's start with this lede:
PROBLEM: We said the dead driver hit a dog, two trees and a fence. In fact, he swerved to avoid the dog before he hit the trees and fence.
SOLUTION:
Before we start writing, take time to make sure we correctly understand
how things went down. Then, after we finish, we don't simply proof for
spelling errors; we go through the story and make sure what we wrote
factually lines up with the actual narrative of events. Only then we hit
the "send" button.
***
PROBLEM: We said college students came up with the African animal transplant idea, when in fact it was professors that came up with it.
SOLUTION: Same as above.
***
PROBLEM: We spelled the name of the store at Quick Shoppe when in fact it was Quik Shoppe, with no "c" in Quik.
SOLUTION:
Same as above. We need to be precise with names. Be sure to
double-check the spellings of ALL names-- whether of people or
businesses or pets -- both before and after writing.
***
PROBLEM: In one lede we said,
Husband-to-be Scot Forsythe was slain in his vehicle after attempting to dodge a dog a half-mile away from where he
was to be married fifteen minutes later. But slain means, killed by someone else; Forsythe died accidentally on his own. Plus, Scott has two T's, not one.
SOLUTION:
Make sure the words we use correctly represent the situation and do not
create an unintended change in meaning. Plus, double-check spellings of
names. Close isn't close enough; we have to be dead-on.
***
Is that being nit-picky? No; that's journalism.
Giving people accurate information that has been carefully vetted is
what we do. Early in the semester, I called journalism a "discipline of
verification." This is what I meant.
Learning to write
isn't journalism. Learning to organize information isn't all of
journalism. Putting in a system of checking facts before, during and
after writing and organizing information is what makes this kind of
writing and organizing known as journalism.
Still,
while this is discouraging, let's not get discouraged. The whole point
of these exercises -- and getting fatals, too -- is to learn by doing,
reviewing what was done, learning what could be done better, and then
applying those lessons the next time.
And that's what we're going to do here, by redoubling our efforts to carefully fact-check everything we write.
Earlier
this semester in a pair of blog posts, I posted an accuracy checklist
and a list of ways to avoid inaccuracies. I would strongly suggest that
you revisit those two blog posts, and begin incorporating its
suggestions in your writing routines. You can link to the exact post right here.
I've said it before, and I'll say it a bazillion more times before the semester ends: journalism isn't about writing; it's about getting it right.
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